Intellectual Property Rights in the Global EconomyPeterson Institute, 2000 - 266 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 52
Page xi
... particular projects and makes the final decision to publish an individual study . The Institute hopes that its studies and other activities will contribute to building a stronger foundation for international economic policy around the ...
... particular projects and makes the final decision to publish an individual study . The Institute hopes that its studies and other activities will contribute to building a stronger foundation for international economic policy around the ...
Page 5
... particular , it requires Mexico and Canada to enforce IPRs that go beyond those each had adopted earlier . Regional agreements aim at one of four levels of coordination on IPRs : 1. The most extreme form is full policy harmonization ...
... particular , it requires Mexico and Canada to enforce IPRs that go beyond those each had adopted earlier . Regional agreements aim at one of four levels of coordination on IPRs : 1. The most extreme form is full policy harmonization ...
Page 6
... particular interest include further protection for biotechnological products , the relationship of competition policy to IPRs , and whether there should be global rules on the treatment of parallel imports . Furthermore , dynamic ...
... particular interest include further protection for biotechnological products , the relationship of competition policy to IPRs , and whether there should be global rules on the treatment of parallel imports . Furthermore , dynamic ...
Page 9
... particular expression of an idea , such as a book , film , or computer program . Trademarks offer guarantees to consumers about the ultimate origin of a product , thereby lowering the costs of searching for preferred alternatives and ...
... particular expression of an idea , such as a book , film , or computer program . Trademarks offer guarantees to consumers about the ultimate origin of a product , thereby lowering the costs of searching for preferred alternatives and ...
Page 10
... particular market needs . Infor- mation technologies are clear examples of high fixed - cost , low marginal- cost activities , making them vulnerable to rapid entry and cheap copying . The nature of these goods and services raises ...
... particular market needs . Infor- mation technologies are clear examples of high fixed - cost , low marginal- cost activities , making them vulnerable to rapid entry and cheap copying . The nature of these goods and services raises ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
benefits biotechnology Brazil capital chapter China competition policy compulsory licenses considerable consumers copying costs coun developing countries developing economies discussed domestic drugs dynamic effects electronic enforcement European Union evidence example exports firms foreign Fred Bergsten Gary Clyde Hufbauer genetic growth imitation impacts implementation income increase India industrial infringement innovation intellectual property protection Intellectual Property Rights international economic investment IPRS protection ISBN issues Japan John Williamson levels limited market power Maskus Mexico MNEs NAFTA negotiations parallel imports parallel trade patent applications patent laws patent protection patent rights percent pharmaceutical piracy plant varieties potential price discrimination problems programs raise reform regimes regulation requires result reverse engineering rise sectors significant South Korea standards strength of IPRS strengthening stronger IPRs stronger patents Table technical technology transfer tion trade secrets trademarks TRIPS agreement United variable Watal weak IPRs WIPO World