Bronwyn H. Hall is Professor of Economics Emerita at the University of California at Berkeley, Visiting Professor at MPI-Munich, and a Research Associate at the NBER, IFS-London, and the Innovation Lab, College de France. She received the 2024 Award of the Distinguished Fellow granted by the American Economic Association. She has published numerous articles on the economics and econometrics of technical change and innovation and is the editor of the Handbook of the Economics of Innovation in the Elsevier series of economic handbooks. Her research includes analysis of the use of intellectual property systems in developed and developing countries, the valuation of intangible (knowledge) assets, comparative firm-level R&D investment and innovation studies, measuring the returns to R&D and innovation, and analysis of such technology policies as R&D subsidies and tax incentives. Christian Helmers is Professor of Economics at the Leavey School of Business at Santa Clara University and Visiting Professor at KU Leuven. His research focuses on innovation and intellectual property. Before joining Santa Clara, he was an assistant professor at Universidad Carlos III, Madrid. Prior to that, he worked as a research economist at the London School of Economics.
There is a 'before' and an 'after' Hall and Helmer's masterful textbook. Up to now, a reader interested both in the economic impacts of innovation and in the role and design of patent systems would have no synthetic text to rely upon. The Economics of Innovation and Intellectual Property does a beautiful job at filling this gap. With great pedagogy, the authors bring the reader to the knowledge frontier on both the macroeconomic impacts and the microeconomic underpinnings of innovation. This book is an absolute must-read for anyone * students, economic scholars and practitioners, lawyersinterested in innovation, growth, and intellectual property.Philippe Aghion, College de France and INSEAD * With the publication of The Economics of Innovation and Intellectual Property, Hall and Helmers have produced an extraordinarily comprehensive, rigorous and deeply thoughtful volume. This impressive text now makes the learning of more than six decades of theoretical and empirical economics in this important subfield readily available to advanced undergraduate and graduate economics students interested in innovation and technological change. * Wesley Cohen, Fuqua School of Business, Duke University *