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4.12.2004
 Marginal Costs & Intellectual Property 
Professor John Duffy of GW Law School has published "The Marginal Cost Controversy in Intellectual Property" in the Winter 2004 issue of the University of Chicago Law Review. (Available through WestLaw with a credit card.)

It is a useful piece. A common refrain of the copyleft is that the marginal cost of a digital copy of an intellectual product is zero, so, therefore, "economics teaches us" that it should be priced at zero. This is a fallacy, as discussed in Marginalized, akin to the logic of the ancient paradox that proves that Achilles can never catch the tortoise. But the fallacy has serious consequences; it underlies current proposals that intellectual property should be made available for free and financed by a tax-and-subsidy scheme.

Duffy puts the issue in the context of earlier economic debates about industries with high fixed costs, pointing out that the current debate is actually a continuation of a controversy that has gone on in the field of public utilities for a century, and that the same overwhelming objections to subsidy schemes that have been developed in the public utility context apply equally to intellectual property.

My only reservation is that Duffy does not examine critically enough the underlying assumption that marginal cost pricing is in fact a normative standard to which we should aspire. In reality, in an investment-heavy economy the concept is so constrained as to be of almost no practical value, and the effort to attain it by, for example, antitrust authorities is Ahabian.
posted by James DeLong : 4/12/2004 09:50:37 AM

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Home Page
4.12.2004
 Marginal Costs & Intellectual Property 
Professor John Duffy of GW Law School has published "The Marginal Cost Controversy in Intellectual Property" in the Winter 2004 issue of the University of Chicago Law Review. (Available through WestLaw with a credit card.)

It is a useful piece. A common refrain of the copyleft is that the marginal cost of a digital copy of an intellectual product is zero, so, therefore, "economics teaches us" that it should be priced at zero. This is a fallacy, as discussed in Marginalized, akin to the logic of the ancient paradox that proves that Achilles can never catch the tortoise. But the fallacy has serious consequences; it underlies current proposals that intellectual property should be made available for free and financed by a tax-and-subsidy scheme.

Duffy puts the issue in the context of earlier economic debates about industries with high fixed costs, pointing out that the current debate is actually a continuation of a controversy that has gone on in the field of public utilities for a century, and that the same overwhelming objections to subsidy schemes that have been developed in the public utility context apply equally to intellectual property.

My only reservation is that Duffy does not examine critically enough the underlying assumption that marginal cost pricing is in fact a normative standard to which we should aspire. In reality, in an investment-heavy economy the concept is so constrained as to be of almost no practical value, and the effort to attain it by, for example, antitrust authorities is Ahabian.
posted by James DeLong : 4/12/2004 09:50:37 AM

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IPcentral WebLog
Blog Main
Recent Posts
  TV by Internet
The View to 2010
Porn & the Internet
Digital Rights Management
Network Effects
Stock Options: Its Over Power & Money, Not Good Accounting
File-Sharing and Market Power
Imperial Canada
More on File-Sharing Study
Database Protection
Archives by Month
  December 2003
January 2004
February 2004
March 2004
April 2004
May 2004
June 2004
July 2004
August 2004
September 2004
October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
Links
  PFF Blog
Atom.xml Site Feed
   
 
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