Seminar  |  11.11.2015, 18:00

Insitutsseminar: Preliminary Injunctions in Patent Litigation

18:00 - 19:30 Uhr, Arthur Martels, Max-Planck-Institut für Innovation und Wettbewerb,  München, Raum E10

Verschiedenes  |  10.11.2015, 17:00

IP Dispute Resolution Forum

17:00 - 19:30 Uhr, Max-Planck-Institut für Innovation und Wettbewerb, München, Raum E10

The IP Dispute Resolution Forum wants to offer an international platform to analyze, discuss and develop solutions to legal and economic issues in the field of IP disputes.

A particular focus will be the question of whether, and if so how, arbitration and mediation procedures can be used as an efficient supplement or even alternative to state court proceedings. The call for efficient dispute resolution mechanisms is getting louder in particular in the current conflicts regarding standard essential patents and so called FRAND licenses. Furthermore, the UPC Agreement provides that a Patent Mediation and Arbitration Centre shall be established. So now is the time to think about how alternative dispute resolution mechanisms should work in field of Intellectual Property.

We believe that the IP Dispute Resolution Forum would be a good place to start discussing ideas and to develop a framework for practical solutions and procedures. At present, the initiative is led by enthusiasts from different practice areas with diverse backgrounds, namely, judges Dr. Matthias Zigann (Presiding Judge at the Munich Regional Court I) and Dr. Georg Werner (Judge at the Munich Regional Court I, as of October 2015 seconded to the Xth division of the German Federal Supreme Court), Dr. Peter Picht (Senior Research Fellow at MPI), Raffael Probst (former managing director of Munich Center for Dispute Resolution), Dan Bauer (entrepreneur and project consultant), Marco Stief (Partner, Maiwald), Dr. Axel Walz (Partner, King & Wood Mallesons LLP).

Veranstaltungen  |  05.11.2015 |

Brown Bag-Seminar: How Do Patents Shape Global Value Chains? International and Domestic Patenting and Value-Added Trade

Travis J. Lybbert (University of California)

Intellectual property plays an important role in the global economy through its impact on technology diffusion, knowledge transfer and competition. There is, however, dramatic heterogeneity across both industries and countries in these effects and their implications for economic growth. In this paper, we exploit a newly developed algorithmic concordance that links patents to industry and trade classifications to characterize how patents affect the structure of global value chains. Using recent techniques to decompose gross exports and construct bilateral measures of value-added trade, we test how domestic and international (bilateral) patenting specifically related to different industries affects production fragmentation as measured by decreases in the value-added export (VAX) ratio.

Over the period 1999-2009 for 18 industries and 35 countries, we find that increased international patenting is associated with greater production fragmentation. This effect is particularly strong for “imported” or inbound international patent applications. While there is some heterogeneity among industries in this relationship, there is much greater heterogeneity among countries: For several countries, “exported” patents reduce production fragmentation and “imported” patents increase production fragmentation. As empirical research into the structure of global value chains expands, the role of patents and other forms of intellectual property merit careful consideration. The exploratory results we present are intended to provide a point of departure for continued characterization of these interrelationships.

Please drop us a line if you plan to attend: fabian.gaessler(at)ip.mpg.de

Veranstaltungen  |  04.11.2015 |

Brown Bag-Seminar: The Unpredictably Stable Entrepreneur

Virgilio Failla (Institute for Strategy, Technology and Organization, LMU Munich)

This paper challenges the conventional belief that entrepreneurship is an unstable career path. Entrepreneurship is shown to decrease rather than increase individuals’ turnover tendencies. This finding persists after controlling for lock-in effects associated with sunk costs and unfavorable outside options.

Entrepreneurship is argued to represent a high quality job-match for individuals who otherwise portray above average turnover rates. Arguably, matching emerges from (i) preferences for independence, (ii) skills composition, and (iii) redeployability of human capital into new settings. The counter-intuitive finding – entrepreneurship yields greater employment stability – has fundamental implications for our understanding of entrepreneurship entry and labor market dynamics.

Vortrag  |  02.11.2015, 18:00

Asia Roundtable: Pharmaceutical Mergers and their Effect on Access and Efficiency: A Case of Emerging Markets

18:00 - 19:30 Uhr, Max-Planck-Institut für Innovation und Wettbewerb, München, Raum E10

Seminar  |  28.10.2015 | 12:00  –  13:30

Brown Bag-Seminar: Quantity, Usability, and Novelty: The Effects of Incentives on Creativity

Marina Schröder (Universität zu Köln)

We study the effect of incentives on different dimensions of creative work. To do so, we introduce a novel real-effort task that allows us to measure quantity, usability, and novelty of individuals’ creative output. In three treatments, we introduce incentives either for quantity alone or for quantity in combination with usability or novelty. We compare performance in these treatments to a baseline with fixed incentives. We find that incentivizing quantity alone or quantity in combination with novelty results in an increase in quantity and novelty and a decrease in the average quality compared to the baseline. Combined incentives for quality and quantity do not have a significant effect on any of the dimensions of creativity. Our findings are in line with a multi-tasking model where agents choose an optimal allocation of effort between quantity and usability and novelty is negatively correlated to quality. (Authors: Katharina Laske/Marina Schröder)

Vortrag  |  28.10.2015, 11:20

6th GRUR Int. / JIPLP Joint Seminar: Internet Search Engines in the Focus of EU Competition Law – a Closer Look at the Broader Picture

14:00 - 19:30 Uhr, Max-Planck-Institut für Innovation und Wettbewerb, München, Raum E10 

Seminar  |  21.10.2015 | 12:00  –  13:30

Brown Bag-Seminar: Does Google Trends Data Really Predict Car Sales?

Georg von Graevenitz (Queen Mary University, London, School of Business and Management)

This paper focuses on the validation of data obtained from Google Trends as a measure of brand strength. We focus on brands of car manufacturers and types and show that searches on Google Trends predict registrations of cars in long panels. We use data for Germany and for the United Kingdom. To deal with endogeneity we make use of the introduction of scrappage subsidies in 2008/2009 as a natural experiment. We identify and address challenges from non-stationarity and serial correlation in the data. (Authors: Georg von Graevenitz/Christian Helmers)

Vortrag  |  19.10.2015, 09:00

Zukunftsbrücke - Chinese-German Young Professional Campus: Towards a Partnership

9:00 Uhr, Max-Planck-Institut für Innovation und Wettbewerb, München, Raum E10

Thematisch liegt der diesjährige Fokus der Veranstaltung auf den Chancen und Potentialen einer verstärkt innovationsorientierten bilateralen Zusammenarbeit. Die Zukunftsbrücke 2015 knüpft damit an die Idee der deutsch-chinesischen Innovationspartnerschaft an, die im Oktober 2014 im Rahmen der dritten bilateralen Konsultationen zwischen der Bundesregierung und dem chinesischen Staatsrat begründet wurde.

Das Programm der Zukunftsbrücke 2015 wird aktuelle Entwicklungen und Innovationen aus beiden Ländern in den Bereichen Wirtschaft und Technologie sowie Gesellschaft und Politik beleuchten. Als notwendige Grundlage langfristig erfolgreicher Zusammenarbeit werden zudem Fragen der nationalen Kultur und Identität und des interkulturellen Verständnisses zur Diskussion stehen.

Veranstaltungen  |  14.10.2015 |

Brown Bag-Seminar: On (Open) Access to Research in Developing Countries: Empirical Evidence from Article-Level Data

Patrick Waelbroeck (Paris Tech)

Using panel data for 36,652 research articles published by authors from 798 institutions in 5 countries (Bolivia, Ecuador, Kenya, Nigeria, Peru), we analyze the role of access to academic works in developing countries. A focus will be drawn to the impact of a recent initiative (OARE) that seeks to provide research institutions in developing countries with free or reduced fee access to scientific literature in the field of environmental science. We use bibliometric data from Web of Science and institutions’ OARE registration data provided by the World Health Organization. We find a positive treatment effect, revealing that OARE institutions publish more as compared to non-OARE institutions. Most interestingly, we find that registration to OARE has increased competition between researchers within and between countries in different regions in the developing world. In particular, our evidence reveals a crowding-out effect for researchers from non-member institutions. (Authors: Frank Mueller-Langer/Marc Scheufen/Patrick Waelbroeck)