VERTICAL INTEGRATION AND PATENT LICENSING IN UPSTREAM AND DOWNSTREAM MARKETS
VERTICAL INTEGRATION AND PATENT LICENSING IN UPSTREAM AND DOWNSTREAM MARKETS
Author(s): Moez El Elj, Fehmi BouguezziSubject(s): Economy
Published by: ASERS Publishing
Keywords: Cournot successive markets; fee licensing; vertical integration; process innovation
Summary/Abstract: The present paper studies and compares different vertical integration structures on consumers and total surplus with licensing by mean of a fixed fee in two successive homogeneous-good Cournot duopolies where one of the firms in each market has a different cost-reducing innovation. The key difference between the present model and models in the existing literature is that here we suppose the existence of two different patents in upstream and downstream markets. In each market we find two firms: the patent holding firm and a non-innovative firm. In upstream market, the innovative firm owns an innovation reducing the input marginal production cost. In downstream market the innovative firm owns an innovation reducing marginal cost of transforming the input into output. We discuss different structures of vertical integration and we show that consumer surplus and total surplus are depending of cost-reducing innovation in upstream and downstream markets and the structure of vertical integration.
Journal: Journal of Advanced Research in Management (JARM)
- Issue Year: I/2010
- Issue No: 01
- Page Range: 4-17
- Page Count: 14
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF