“…Instead of patent length and a patentability requirement, we consider patent breadth as in Li (2001), who finds that increasing patent breadth stimulates R&D and promotes economic growth. Following Li (2001), a large number of studies, such as Goh and Olivier (2002), Furukawa (2007), Chu and Furukawa (2011), Cysne and Turchick (2012), Iwaisako and Futagami (2013), Bond and Zissimos (2017), Huang et al (2017), Chu and Cozzi (2018), Iwaisako (2020), Zheng et al (2020a), Chu et al (2021a), andYang (2021), also explore the effects of patent breadth within variants of the Schumpeterian growth model. 8 The present paper complements this strand of the literature by investigating the growth effect of patent protection in a quality-ladder 6 For other seminal studies on R&D-based endogenous economic growth, see also Romer (1990), Segerstrom et al (1990), Jones (1995), and Peretto (1998).…”