Is There A Piracy Kuznets Curve?
Abstract We investigate empirically the relationship between software piracy and GDP per capita by considering non-linear effects. We use a panel data analysis for 100 countries over a period of 15 years. We remedy several previous econometric and methodological shortcomings and show that piracy follows a Kuznets-like curve. Concretely, piracy first increases with the level of GDP per capita, reaches a maximum, and then decreases at higher levels of income. Making people richer can be the best way to decrease piracy over the long-term horizon. Intellectual property rights holders should not aim for a decrease of piracy per se, but rather a decrease of piracy in those circumstances where it is most likely to be substituted by legal sales. Economic growth can generate by itself incentives to curb piracy.
Year of publication: |
2012
|
---|---|
Authors: | El Harbi, Sana ; Grolleau, Gilles ; Bekir, Insaf |
Published in: |
Review of Law & Economics. - De Gruyter, ISSN 1555-5879, ZDB-ID 2191851-X. - Vol. 8.2012, 2, p. 433-456
|
Publisher: |
De Gruyter |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Le piratage peut-il être profitable à la firme piratée?
Bekir, Insaf, (2010)
-
(Deceptive) status seeking strategies in France and Tunisia
Bekir, Insaf, (2011)
-
How a luxury monopolist might benefit from the aspirational utility effect of counterfeiting?
Bekir, Insaf, (2013)
- More ...