2012
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.1986542
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Does Agency Funding Affect Decisionmaking?: An Empirical Assessment of the PTO’s Granting Patterns

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Cited by 14 publications
(45 citation statements)
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“…We find evidence consistent with the above predictions and suggesting that upon the occurrence of a negative financial shock to the PTO's financial health, the PTO begins to extend preferential examination‐queuing treatment to those technologies that cost the Agency the least to examine. These results supplement Frakes and Wasserman (), which had found an increase in the grant rates of high‐fee‐generating patent types and technologies (relative to their low‐fee‐generating counterparts) in response to the same financial shocks. Moreover, in the present analysis, we find that the PTO's initial inclination to target low‐cost examination prioritization over inflationary granting practices as a mechanism to deal with binding budget constraints appears to reverse course—that is, the PTO becomes more heavily reliant on overgranting as the relevant mechanism—upon the shift in congressional fee‐diversion practices in 2004.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 85%
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“…We find evidence consistent with the above predictions and suggesting that upon the occurrence of a negative financial shock to the PTO's financial health, the PTO begins to extend preferential examination‐queuing treatment to those technologies that cost the Agency the least to examine. These results supplement Frakes and Wasserman (), which had found an increase in the grant rates of high‐fee‐generating patent types and technologies (relative to their low‐fee‐generating counterparts) in response to the same financial shocks. Moreover, in the present analysis, we find that the PTO's initial inclination to target low‐cost examination prioritization over inflationary granting practices as a mechanism to deal with binding budget constraints appears to reverse course—that is, the PTO becomes more heavily reliant on overgranting as the relevant mechanism—upon the shift in congressional fee‐diversion practices in 2004.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…Furthermore, balancing its desire to increase application throughput with the disutility it places on deviating from its otherwise optimal grant rate, we predict that the Agency may limit the degree of any such deviation by targeting these distortionary overgranting proclivities on patent types that generate the highest fees for the Agency—that is, large‐entity applicants (which pay double the fees relative to small entities) and applicants within technologies that consistently renew their patents at higher rates. Frakes and Wasserman () present evidence consistent with such predictions. We replicate these findings, in part, below.…”
Section: Theorymentioning
confidence: 55%
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“…Moreover, under-pricing the front-end fees provides patent offices with an incentive to grant patents, since they receive nothing for applications denied, and the repercussions of wrongly issued patents are experienced only indirectly at some future time. This is especially likely in times of chronic budget shortfalls (Frakes and Wasserman, forthcoming 2013). While the United States is not alone in subsidizing applications and examination, patent quality is generally considered to be more problematic for the USPTO than the EPO and the Japanese Patent Office, the other two "trilateral" offices (European Patent Office (2011); Quillen and Webster (2006); de SaintGeorges and Van Pottelsberghe (2011)).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%