Paying off the Competition: Contracting, Market Power, and Innovation Incentives
This paper explores the relationship between a firm’s legal contracting environment and its innovation incentives. Using granular data from the pharmaceutical industry, we examine a contracting mechanism through which incumbents maintain market power: “pay-for-delay” agreements to delay the market entry of competitors. Exploiting a shock where such contracts become legally tenuous, we find that affected incumbents subsequently increase their innovation activity across a variety of project-level measures. Exploring the nature of this innovation, we also find that it is more “impactful” from a scientific and commercial standpoint. The results provide novel evidence that restricting the contracting space can boost innovation at the firm level. However, at the extensive margin we find a reduction in innovation by new entrants in response to increased competition, suggesting a nuanced effect on aggregate innovation.
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      Copy CitationXuelin Li, Andrew W. Lo, and Richard T. Thakor, "Paying off the Competition: Contracting, Market Power, and Innovation Incentives," NBER Working Paper 28964 (2021), https://doi.org/10.3386/w28964.
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