The Patent System and the New Economy

Patents and other forms of intellectual property aim "to promote the progress of science and useful arts." Achieving this purpose depends on policies that concern the nature of patentable discoveries, the scope and duration of patent rights, and the methods for acquiring and enforcing those rights. Though such policies have changed over time in response to changes in science, technology, and economic organization, there is growing concern that the U.S. patent system is nonetheless failing to keep pace with rapid advances in information technology and biotechnology. At the same time, our patent regime is also facing a separate set of challenges that arise from the growth of litigation in the United States and abroad, the globalization of commerce, and multiplying conflicts among nations' patent policies. This conference will explore the problems of the patent system and proposals for improving it.

About the Author

 

Christopher
DeMuth
  • Christopher DeMuth was president of AEI from December 1986 through December 2008. Previously, he was administrator for information and regulatory affairs in the Office of Management and Budget and executive director of the Presidential Task Force on Regulatory Relief in the Reagan administration; taught economics, law, and regulatory policy at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University; practiced regulatory, antitrust, and general corporate law; and worked on urban and environmental policy in the Nixon White House.

     

  • Phone: 2028625895
    Email: cdemuth@aei.org
  • Assistant Info

    Name: Keriann Hopkins
    Phone: 2028625897
    Email: keriann.hopkins@aei.org
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