Browse Publications
Publications
Publications
Intellectual Property and the Knowledge Economy
ISBN:Author: Kay Withers
Contributors:
Price: Free
Publication Date: 07 February 2006
It is too often assumed that the West is locked in a zero-sum game with emerging economies, in which it must either lock up its assets or have them stolen. The metaphor of intellectual property has likewise led to confused and confusing representations of the purpose of copyright and patent laws, and their function within the economy. Economic logic is warped where the interests of one industry are presented as identical to the interests of the economy overall. There is a shortage of reasoned economic analysis of IP, and careful consideration of the evidence surrounding the UK’s own knowledge economy.
This paper attempts to plug this gap, by representing a set of fundamental economic arguments in layman’s terms, collected together from a range of credible sources. In doing so it weaves together theoretical economic justifications for IP with empirical evidence for its significance in our economy today.
Latest Reports:
Migration Statistics, August 2010
Latest research on NEETs
Immigration and Employment
Now It's Personal
Learning from welfare-to-work advisers from around the world >
Why Interns Need a Fair Wage
A briefing from ippr and Internocracy >
Regeneration Through Co-operation
Creating a framework for communities to act together >
Global Brit


ippr podcasts >
RSS feeds >