Property rights and information flows: a simulation approach
Authored by Max Boisot, Ian C. MacMillan, Kyeong Seok Han
Date Published: 2007-02
DOI: 10.1007/s00191-006-0031-7
Sponsors:
Wharton-SMU Research Center of Singapore Management University
Platforms:
Swarm
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
With the growth of the information economy, the proportion of knowledge-intensive goods to total goods is constantly increasing. Lessig (The future of ideas: the fate of the commons in a connected world. Vintage, New York 2001) has argued that IPRs have now become too favourable to existing producers and that their `winner-take-all' characteristics are constraining the creators of tomorrow. In this paper we look at how variations in IPRs regimes might affect the creation and social cost of new knowledge in economic systems. Drawing on a conceptual framework, the Information Space or I-Space to explore how the uncontrollable diffusibility of knowledge relates to its degree of structure, we deploy an agent-based modelling approach to explore the issue of IPRs. We take the ability to control the diffusibility of knowledge as a proxy measure for an ability to establish property rights in such knowledge. Second, we take the rate of obsolescence of knowledge as a proxy measure for the degree of turbulence induced by different regimes of technical change. Then we simulate the quantity and cost to society of new knowledge under different property right regimes.
Tags
agent-based simulation
Knowledge management
evolutionary modelling
information flows
intellectual property rights