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Intellectual capital --- Intangible property --- Knowledge management.
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"This is the 16th Annual volume in the series collecting the presentations and discussion from the Annual Fordham IP Conference. The contributions, by leading world experts, analyse the most pressing issues in copyright, trademark and patent law as seen from the perspectives of the USA, the EU, Asia and WIPO. This volume, in common with its predecessors makes a valuable and lasting contribution to the discourse in IP law. The contents, while always informative, are also critical and questioning of new developments and policy concerns. Praise for the series: 'This must be one of the most enjoyable and thought-provoking conferences in the IP field. The high quality of the speakers is matched by the intense, audience-led debates and challenges which follow.' The Honourable Mr Justice Laddie, Royal Courts of Justice, London 'Faculty for this conference are always well-known 'names' _ well respected leaders in their fields, speaking with a combination of candor and timeliness that is unrivaled by any other forum of its kind.' Honorable Marybeth Peters, Register of Copyrights, United States Copyright Office."--Bloomsbury Publishing.
Intellectual property. --- Intellectual property --- Intangible property
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The latest System of National Accounts (the 2008 SNA) explicitly recognises, for the first time, that expenditures on research and experimental development (R&D) should be recorded as capital formation. This is a natural extension to the 1993 SNA, which recommends recording many acquisitions of software and databases, mineral exploration, and entertainment, artistic and literary originals as capital formation, too. These products have a common characteristic, namely that their value reflects the underlying intellectual property they embody, which is why they are referred to collectively in this publication as intellectual property products (IPPs). But they also share another important characteristic: their measurement is not straightforward, and in the absence of clear guidance it is highly likely that estimates will not be comparable between countries. This Handbook is designed to provide that guidance by considering IPPs collectively, based on their common characteristics, by type, based on any specificities, such as data availability, and by detailed transaction - for example the valuation of IPPs that have been produced for internal use by their developers, the valuation of unsuccessful IPPs, and the production of IPPs produced and made freely available by government.
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS --- General --- Intellectual property --- Management Styles & Communication --- Management --- Business & Economics --- Economic aspects --- Intangible property. --- Economic aspects. --- Incorporeal property --- Intangible assets --- Intangible property --- Intangibles --- Law and legislation --- Property
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Intellectual property --- Intellectual property. --- IP (Intellectual property) --- Proprietary rights --- Rights, Proprietary --- Intangible property --- Law and legislation
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Now updated with new research and even more intuitive explanations, a demystifying explanation of how managers can inform themselves to make less risky, more profitable business decisions This insightful and eloquent book will show you how to measure those things in your own business that, until now, you may have considered ""immeasurable,"" including customer satisfaction, organizational flexibility, technology risk, and technology ROI.Adds even more intuitive explanations of powerful measurement methods and shows how they can be applied to areas such as risk management and
380.1 --- AA / International- internationaal --- Waardeleer. --- Intangible property --- Valuation. --- Engineering --- General and Others --- Corporations --- Stocks --- Valuation --- Finance --- Business & economics --- Accounting --- Financial. --- Waardeleer
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How did the implementation of the EU Enforcement Directive on IP rights, which was adopted just before the expansion of the EU in May 2004, affect new EU Member States? This monograph is focused on three Baltic countries (Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia) and is aimed to present the collected information on the most relevant historic, social, economic and legal factors of those countries and to examine them. The examination leads to certain observations on what impact the listed factors made on the implementation of the Directive in that region, how they changed the “IP enforcement mechanisms”, case practise which existed before the adoption of the Directive, and what IP right holders can expect when litigating in the Baltics. Besides, this monograph gives a bigger picture on what the aims and objectives of the Enforcement Directive were and how they were actually reflected in the current IP enforcement practice of the so-called countries in transit where effective enforcement of IP rights is essential.
Intellectual property --- Intellectual property infringement --- European Parliament. --- Infringement of intellectual property --- IP (Intellectual property) --- Proprietary rights --- Rights, Proprietary --- Intangible property --- Law and legislation --- Urheberrecht --- Medienrecht --- Gewerblicher Rechtsschutz
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Using philosophical, empirical, and theoretical approaches, this inquiry into the nature and scope of Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) studies the different justifications usually put forward in favour of protecting rights in intellectual property and shows how such rights come into conflict with other rights in society.
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'The Museum of Bioprospecting, Intellectual Property, and the Public Domain' discusses the issue of intellectual property rights versus the public domain in facilitating access to genetic resources for biotechnology development, through a dialogue between seven fictional scholars and a hilarious octogenarian.
Intellectual property. --- Biotechnology --- Biological products --- Intellectual property --- IP (Intellectual property) --- Proprietary rights --- Rights, Proprietary --- Intangible property --- Law and legislation. --- Law and legislation
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This paper extends the q-theory of investment to model explicitly the decision of firms to invest in intangibles and measures the contribution of intangible goods to the overall capital stock in the U.S. The model highlights the embodiment of intangible goods in tangibles and the role of relative price movements in the measurement of the contribution of each type of investment to the overall capital stock. The downward trend in the aggregate investment deflator series reported by national accounts is found to have a significant downward bias in the 90s. The model also shows that the growth in the overall capital stock from the late-80s until 2000 was driven mainly by an increase in the contribution of intangibles. However, the contribution of intangibles fell consistently after 2000. These results underscore the importance of accounting for the movements in the price of intangibles rather than focusing only on their rising share in overall investment.
Investments --- Stockholders --- Investments: General --- Investments: Stocks --- Labor --- Macroeconomics --- Pension Funds --- Non-bank Financial Institutions --- Financial Instruments --- Institutional Investors --- Investment --- Capital --- Intangible Capital --- Capacity --- General Aggregative Models: General --- Price Level --- Inflation --- Deflation --- Professional Labor Markets --- Occupational Licensing --- Investment & securities --- Labour --- income economics --- Stocks --- Intangible capital --- National accounts --- Price indexes --- Skilled labor --- Saving and investment --- National income --- Labor market --- United States --- Income economics
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Existing wealth estimates show that in most countries intangible capital is the largest share of total wealth. Intangible capital is calculated as the difference between total wealth and tangible (produced and natural) capital. This paper uses new estimates of total wealth, natural capital, and physical capital for a panel of countries to shed light on the constituents of the intangible capital residual. In a development-accounting framework, the authors show that factors of production are very successful in explaining the variation in output per worker when they use intangible capital instead of human capital as a factor of production. This suggests that intangible capital captures a broad range of assets typically included in the total factor productivity residual. Human capital is an important factor, both in statistical and economic terms, in regressions decomposing intangible capital.
Accounting framework --- Assets --- Banks & Banking Reform --- Debt Markets --- Economic Theory & Research --- Emerging Markets --- Factors of production --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Human capital --- Intangible --- Intangible assets --- Investment and Investment Climate --- Macroeconomics and Economic Growth --- Natural capital --- Private Sector Development --- Production function --- Regression analysis --- Wealth
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