The Economic Effects of Counterfeiting and Piracy

Policy makers around the world recognize the potentially harmful consequences of trademark counterfeiting and copyright piracy. Indeed, many countries have recently initiated policy reforms to strengthen the enforcement of intellectual property rights (IPR). Further, minimum standards of enforcement have been incorporated in many international treaties, especially trade agreements. This emphasis on enforcement raises basic questions about the actual impacts of IP rights infringement, which differ across the types of IPR and economic sectors. The authors review the academic literature and other studies in the public domain to evaluate what has been learned about these socioeconomic effects, with an emphasis on developing countries where possible. They also identify important gaps in our understanding of the consequences of counterfeiting and piracy and develop recommendations on how governments might collect data and conduct studies to better inform IPR enforcement policy.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fink, Carsten, Maskus, Keith E., Qian, Yi
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2016-02
Subjects:HARMONIZATION, MERCHANDISE, PROTECTION OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, SUBSTITUTION, INVENTIONS, TRANSMISSIONS, SALES, POLICY FRAMEWORK, BUYER, CONTENT CREATORS, LAW ENFORCEMENT, INFORMATION FLOWS, VIDEO, INFORMATION, MONITORING, COPYRIGHTS, P2P NETWORKS, ECONOMIC EFFECTS, FREEWARE, DISTRIBUTION CHANNELS, DIGITAL TRANSMISSIONS, COPYRIGHT, INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS, ROBUSTNESS ANALYSIS, TRANSMISSION, MONOPOLY PRICES, FILE SHARING, MARKET FAILURE, PRICE, TRADEMARK, PRODUCT QUALITY, PC, PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT, MERCHANDISE TRADE, COMPUTER, OPEN ACCESS, DIGITAL CONTENT, ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, INSTITUTIONS, MARKET SEGMENT, BRAND NAME, ADVERTISING, DATA, LEGAL SYSTEMS, MARKET ENTRY, TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE, GLOBAL ECONOMY, COMMERCE, COMPUTERS, TELECOMMUNICATIONS, SOFTWARE PRODUCT, TRADEMARKS, DOMAIN, VIDEO GAMES, INCOME INEQUALITY, LICENSE, OPEN-SOURCE SOFTWARE, SURPLUS, PRODUCTS, CUSTOMS, TARGETS, PRODUCTIVITY, RELEVANT MARKET, MONOPOLY, CONTENT PROVIDERS, EMERGING MARKET, SOFTWARE PACKAGE, BUYERS, BARRIERS TO ENTRY, MARKETING, MARKETS, INTERNATIONAL TELECOMMUNICATIONS, WEB, BUSINESS INFORMATION, PRODUCT, COMPUTER PROGRAMS, ARTISANS, CONSUMER DEMAND, SUBSTITUTES, BRAND, MARKET PRICE, USERS, TECHNOLOGY, R&D, TRANSACTION, AVAILABILITY OF DATA, PDF, HUMAN CAPITAL, RELIABILITY, BUSINESS SOFTWARE, INTERNATIONAL TRADE, INNOVATION POLICIES, SOFTWARE, SOFTWARE PIRACY, RESULTS, DIGITAL INFORMATION, MARKET FAILURES, VALUE, FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT, DEMAND, NETWORKS, PRODUCT CATEGORIES, VIDEOS, END-USER, SALE, INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORKS, MARKET, CONFIDENTIALITY, PRICE DISCRIMINATION, MARKET COMPETITION, RESULT, INNOVATION POLICY, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER, BUSINESSES, BUSINESS, NETWORK, PEER-TO-PEER, MOTION PICTURES, NEW PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT, PERFORMANCE, MARKET POWER, MARKETPLACE, INNOVATION, PROFIT, FUNCTIONALITY, INVESTMENTS, INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, NEW TECHNOLOGY, SUPPLIERS, PROFITS, IP, LABOR MARKETS, TECHNOLOGIES, MOTION PICTURE, PRIVATE SECTORS, TARGET, P2P FILE SHARING, PRICES, USES, MARKET FORCES, SPREAD, PIRACY, USER,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/02/25994655/economic-effects-counterfeiting-piracy-review-implications-developing-countries
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/23923
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