(h/t Quinta)
OECD: Enquiries into Intellectual Property's Economic
Impact
http://www.oecd.org/sti/ieconomy/intellectual-property-economic-impact.htm
Download the full report:
http://www.oecd.org/sti/ieconomy/KBC2-IP.Final.pdf
Contents
Chapter 1: Synthesis
Chapter 2: Measuring the Technological and Economic Value of Patents
Chapter 3: Approaches to the Protection of Trade Secrets
Chapter 4: An Empirical Assessment of the Economic Implications of
Protection for Trade Secrets
Chapter 5: Copyright in the Digital Era: Country Studies
Chapter 6: Design and Design Frameworks: Investing in KBC and
Economic Performance
Chapter 7: Legal Aspects of Open Access to Publicly Funded Research
Chapter 8: Summary of the Expert Workshop, "Society's Gain from the
Intellectual Property Exchange"
Chapter 9: IP-Based Financing of Innovative Firms
Background
Investment and growth in OECD economies is increasingly driven by
investment in intangible assets, also known as knowledge-based
capital (KBC). In many OECD countries, firms now invest as much or
more in KBC as they do in physical capital such as machinery,
equipment and buildings. This shift reflects a variety of long-term
economic and institutional transformations in OECD economies.
The rise of KBC creates new challenges for policymakers, for
business and for the ways in which economic activity is measured.
Many policy frameworks and institutions are still best suited to a
world in which physical capital drove growth. New thinking is needed
to update a range of policy frameworks – from tax and competition
policies to corporate reporting and intellectual property rights.
Two key findings of phase one of the Knowledge-based capital project
were that business investment in KBC is linked to growth and higher
productivity, and KBC has become more prevalent in OECD economies,
spreading across many different industries, growing over time in the
aggregate, and developing into the largest form of business
investment in an increasing number of countries. Because so much KBC
is protected by intellectual property rights, IP-protected capital
has taken on an increasingly prominent and extensive role in
economic activity as KBC has grown.
As part of phase two of the KBC project, this report takes a closer
look at IP’s role in OECD economies while examining some of the most
significant changes to the landscape in which it is operating,
including digitisation and the growth of the Internet.