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ISBN: HB: 9780226645247

University of Chicago Press, NBER – National Bureau of Economic Research

March 2019

250 pp.

23x15 cm

HB:
£45,00
QTY:

Categories:

Innovation Policy and the Economy 2018

Volume 19

This volume highlights the interaction between public policy and innovation. The first chapter documents the dramatic globalization of R&D and how this development has affected the efforts of  U. S. multinationals to operate on the global technology frontier. The next chapter synthesizes research on the impact of trade shocks on innovation and explains how these shocks' effects depend on the firms, industries, and countries affected. The third chapter examines the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) model of research management – an approach to funding and managing high-risk R&D – and offers a method for diagnosing which research efforts are "ARPA-able". Next is a study of the Orphan Drug Act and the key changes in the U. S. healthcare landscape and in drug discovery and development since its passage in 1983. The next two chapters focus on artificial intelligence (AI). One describes how AI diffuses through the economy and discusses implications for economic inequality, antitrust, and intellectual property. The other investigates issues surrounding firm competition and labor force participation, such as data portability and a Universal Basic Income, and evaluates ways to address these issues.  

About the Author

Josh Lerner is the Jacob H. Schiff Professor of Investment Banking at Harvard Business School, with a joint appointment in the finance and entrepreneurial management units, and a research associate of the NBER.

Scott Stern is associate professor of management strategy at the Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University, and a research associate of the NBER.