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Inventors, Patents and Inventive Activities in the English Brewing Industry, 1634-1850

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  • Alessandro Nuvolari
  • James Sumner

Abstract

This paper examines the relationship between patents, appropriability strategies and market for technologies in the English brewing industry before 1850. Previous research has pointed to the apparent oddity that large-scale brewing in this period was characterized both by a self-aware culture of rapid technological innovation, and by a remarkably low propensity to patent. Our study records how brewery innovators pursued a wide variety of highly distinct appropriability strategies, including secrecy, selective revealing, patenting, and open innovation and knowledge-sharing for reputational reasons. All these strategies could co-exist, although some brewery insiders maintained a suspicion of the promoters of patent technologies which faded only in the nineteenth century. Furthermore, we find evidence that sophisticated strategies of selective revealing could support trade in inventions even without the use of the patent system.

Suggested Citation

  • Alessandro Nuvolari & James Sumner, 2012. "Inventors, Patents and Inventive Activities in the English Brewing Industry, 1634-1850," LEM Papers Series 2012/18, Laboratory of Economics and Management (LEM), Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies, Pisa, Italy.
  • Handle: RePEc:ssa:lemwps:2012/18
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    As found by EconAcademics.org, the blog aggregator for Economics research:
    1. “Inventors, Patents and Inventing Activities in the English Brewing Industry, 1634-1850,” A. Nuvolari & J. Sumner (2013)
      by ? in A Fine Theorem on 2013-07-12 12:33:00
    2. To patent or not to patent, that is the question
      by ? in The The NEP-HIS Blog on 2012-11-20 18:34:00
    3. “Inventors, Patents and Inventing Activities in the English Brewing Industry, 1634-1850,” A. Nuvolari & J. Sumner (2013)
      by ? in A Fine Theorem on 2013-07-12 12:33:00

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    Cited by:

    1. Capponi, Giovanna & Criscuolo, Paola & Martinelli, Arianna & Nuvolari, Alessandro, 2019. "Profiting from innovation: Evidence from a survey of Queen's Awards winners," Structural Change and Economic Dynamics, Elsevier, vol. 49(C), pages 155-169.

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