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Modeling agricultural innovation in a rapidly developing country: the case of Chinese pesticide industry
Authors:Guanming Shi  Carl Pray
Institution:1. Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics, Taylor Hall, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706‐1503, USA;2. School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, 55 Dudley Road, New Brunswick, NJ 08901‐8520, USA
Abstract:Technology and innovation play an increasingly important role in the economic development of both developed and developing countries. We investigate how policy and market factors influence firms’ (or other potential inventors’) decisions on innovation or imitation by developing a model that emphasizes expected market size, appropriability and technological opportunity. We empirically test the model using provincial pesticide innovation data from a rapidly developing country, China. We find that the government encouraged local innovation by opening regions to more international trade, by increasing investments in public research and education, and by strengthening intellectual property right (IPR) enforcement to meet its WTO TRIPS obligations. Moreover, while IPR enforcement and increases in market size are important in encouraging innovation, empirical evidence is mixed as inventors respond to these factors differently. Policies to increase expected market size could increase copying rather than inducing R&D investments, and extended patent life may reinforce the original standing of infringers as well as inventors.
Keywords:Innovation  Pesticide  China  Patent  TRIPS  O31  O34  O38
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