![Michele Polo Michele Polo](/typo3conf/ext/zew_personaltool/Resources/Public/Img/placeholder.jpg)
Michele Polo // Bocconi University, Milan, Italy
We study the interaction of a firm that invests in research and, if successful, undertakes a practice to exploit the innovation, and an enforcer that sets legal standards, fines and accuracy. In innovative industries deterrence on actions interacts with deterrence on research. A per-se legality rule prevails when the practice increases expected welfare, moving to a discriminating rule combined with type-I accuracy for higher probabilities of social harm. Moreover, discriminating rules should be adopted more frequently in traditional industries than in innovative environments; patent and antitrust policies are substitutes; additional room for per-se (illegality) rules emerges when fines are bounded.
Michele Polo // Bocconi University, Milan, Italy