
doi: 10.1007/bf01074202
handle: 10419/23048
Copyright protection, or more generally, intellectual property rights, can be regarded as a means for the stimulation of production of information goods. This paper analyses the basic problem of production and dissemination of information and the role of copyright protection as an incentive for the producers of creative works. Using a simple model, it is shown that not only a cause for limiting the extent of copyright protection does exist, but that also an argument for a minimum level of protection can be found. Even optimal copyright protection, given the restriction that production and dissemination of information goods has to be co-ordinated by a market mechanism, however, does not lead to a first-best (allocatively efficient) solution. Hence, the judgment that copyright protection is the best solution to the basic problem can be grounded only on a comparative institutional approach.
intellectual property,copyright protection,information goods, ddc:330, K11, D23, copyright protection, intellectual property, information goods, jel: jel:K11, jel: jel:D23
intellectual property,copyright protection,information goods, ddc:330, K11, D23, copyright protection, intellectual property, information goods, jel: jel:K11, jel: jel:D23
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