• Title/Summary/Keyword: Different Willingness to Enforce

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The Intertemporal Enforcement Strategies of Copyright Protection : An Analysis of Information Goods in the Presence of File-Sharing Networks

  • Kim, Jong-Woon
    • Journal of Information Technology Applications and Management
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    • v.16 no.3
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    • pp.1-15
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    • 2009
  • The paper analyzes a copyright owning firm's incentive to enforce its copyright in the presence of file-sharing networks. I devise a two-period model where a copyright owner sells two different versions of a creator's information good, and show that the firm's overall profits are enhanced by a strategy of differential inter-temporal enforcement of the copyright protection, compared to strategies of no enforcement or full enforcement in both periods. If the firm enforces no copyright protection in the first period, the low-valuation consumers may make and consume copies that are imperfect substitutes for the original information good. If there is a significant increase in the willingness-to-pay of some low-valuation consumers after they experience the information good, the firm can extract the increased consumer surplus by enforcing a positive level of copyright protection in the second period. Social welfare, however, is maximized in the case of no enforcement.

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Agribusiness and State-Level Environmental Policy in the U.S. Hog and Beef Industries (미국의 농업경영과 주 정부의 환경정책 -양돈 및 육우 산업을 중심으로-)

  • Park, Dooho
    • Environmental and Resource Economics Review
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    • v.15 no.4
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    • pp.761-782
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    • 2006
  • Public concern about potential environmental risks of agricultural business for the livestock production and processing is increasing. However, due to differences in general industry structural characteristics, such as farm production and waste management practices, the effect of environmental policies may differ from species to species as well as across size categories. I hypothesize that additionally the Hog subsector may be more responsive to (or a greater driver of) a changing environmental policy environment than the beef cattle subsector. As a result, I expect to see more evidence of sensitivity in the environmental policy milieu from hog-operation stocking and location decisions than with the beef cattle industry. The written stringency may not effective, instead state's willingness to enforce has directed and regulated. However, in presence of rapid structural change, just like hog, industry location is affected by state regulation. The environmental compliance cost may be a small portion of industry total cost and fixed cost of beef industry makes for them to take into account environmental compliance for their decision location making. The special movements of flog industry have chance to minimize the cost of the operation and they willing to locate less stringent place.

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