Abstract

Do different pharmaceutical product liability regimes in different countries induce propensity to patent? We exploit the variation in pharmaceutical liability and litigation rules across firms in the pharmaceutical industry and countries to explain the firm-level propensity to patent. Drawing on a large dataset from European Patent Office (EPO) covering over 9,950 pharmaceutical patents from 63 countries over the period 1991–2015, we compute the conditional probabilities of individual pharmaceutical firms to acquire a valid-based patent on the validation outcomes and examine whether different liability regimes encourage or deter firm-level propensity to patent. Our empirical strategy addresses firm-level idiosyncrasies, country-level unobserved effects, and common technology shocks that potentially invoke omitted variable bias in the effects of liability regimes on the propensity to patent. Our investigation reveals that liability regimes combined with damage caps, broad statutory excuses, and reversed burden of proof have a strong positive effect on the firm-level patent stock and a negative effect upon EPO patent validation rate. The evidence suggests that not all liability rules and related litigation procedures are created equal. Firms are systematically more likely to hold (firm-level patent stock) valid patents at the EPO when the liability and litigation rules are not complex and when the damage cap, broad statutory excuses, and reversed burden of proof are introduced.

Highlights

  • The essence of product liability is the appointment of the risks inherent in the modern mass production of goods

  • Our investigation suggests that current product liability regimes and related litigation laws across firms and countries do not account for the failure of pharma­ ceutical firms to acquire a valid patent

  • The results reveal that stricter litigation and liability rules across firms, between and within countries, have a significant strong nega­ tive effect on the stock of European Patent Office (EPO) patents, yet that such rules have a positive effect on the validation rate

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The essence of product liability is the appointment of the risks inherent in the modern mass production of goods. The essence of liabil­ ity law around the globe has shifted from negligence lia­ bility to the concept of strict product liability. This change has been applauded by many as a complete prevalence of consumer protection and of safer goods and services. Scholars found that the reverse occurred (Herbig and Golden, 1994; Malott, 1988; McGuire, 1988) They show that product liability costs in the United States have prompted some manufac­ turers to abandon valuable new technologies, life-saving drugs, and innovative product designs (Herbig and Golden 1994; Malott, 1988; McGuire 1988)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call