高清福利片 of more than 10,000 US companies finds 鈥榬esounding鈥 benefits
Proprietary knowledge protection greatly benefits young and small firms, leading to increased product market competition benefits for consumers, new University of Sydney Business School research finds.
Dr Buhui Qiu
The debate over whether proprietary knowledge protection helps or hinders market competition has received a resounding vote in favour of the former, in new research that studied the performance of over 10,000 US-based companies.
The study found states that adopted laws to protect proprietary knowledge saw increased sales performance and more companies enter the stock market.
Proprietary knowledge 鈥 perhaps better known as a 鈥榯rade secret鈥 or 鈥榮ecret method鈥 鈥 covers any information a company wishes to keep from its rivals, ranging from production methods to salaries and marketing strategies.
Those opposed to rules to protect proprietary knowledge argue they hinder skilled recruitment and prevent 鈥榢nowledge spill-over鈥 from larger firms to new rivals, harming product development and leading to increased market dominance of more established companies.
But new research published in the has found that enhancing proprietary knowledge protection helps small, young and 鈥渟hallow-pocket鈥 firms maintain their competitive advantage, grow their market share and develop better new products 鈥 ultimately benefiting consumers.
高清福利片 co-author Associate Professor Buhui Qiu from the University of Sydney Business School explained that the staggered adoption and rejection of the Inevitable Disclosure Doctrine (IDD) in different US states over several decades provided a 鈥榥atural experiment鈥 to test the impact of laws designed to protect proprietary knowledge.
鈥淭he mobility of employees is one main way proprietary knowledge is leaked. The IDD is specifically designed to stop this by preventing a former employee from working for a rival firm if doing so will inevitably disclose the former employer鈥檚 proprietary knowledge or trade secrets,鈥 said Associate Professor Qiu.
鈥淭he adoption of this legal doctrine by a state court thus significantly enhances the ability of firms located in that state to protect their production-relevant proprietary knowledge.鈥
The study used a broad sample of 10,198 public US firms that covered almost all sectors (except finance and utility) across all states in the US, including multiple states where IDD was adopted and later rejected by the state court.
Adopting the inevitable disclosure doctrine (IDD) in a state on average led to an increase of sales growth of firms located in that state by more than 2 per cent.聽聽
It found the adoption of IDD resulted in a 2.3 percent increase per year in industry-adjusted sales growth compared to control firms. The impact was six times as large for young firms as for old firms, and twice as significant for small firms compared to large firms.
Furthermore, in states that adopted and later rejected IDD, there was almost always a statistically significant decline in product market performance following rejection.
Comparing results between neighbouring states also allowed researchers to factor in variables such as macroeconomic and political conditions.
Associate Professor Qiu said the findings had global economic implications.
鈥淎lthough our empirical investigation is based on US firms, our research findings based on large-sample evidence could be applied to other developed economies such as Australia due to their very similar institutional environments,鈥 said Associate Professor Qiu.
鈥淭his study demonstrates that legal decisions on intellectual property protection have far-reaching implications on firms' abilities to compete and the competition strategies they employ.鈥
The Inevitable Disclosure Doctrine has been referred to in Australian law; for example in ruled in favour of an established lender enforcing a 12-month non-compete clause to prevent a senior employee moving to a new competitor.
Despite working against a new firm in this instance, Associate Professor Qiu said this kind of protection is particularly important for new entrants, 鈥渁nd can therefore improve the competitive environment of the knowledge-based economy and promote economic growth and consumer welfare鈥.
鈥淧roprietary knowledge protection through the Inevitable Disclosure Doctrine can be used in conjunction with other policies of protecting intangible assets, such as non-compete clauses and patent, trademark and copyright protections, to ease the difficulty of financing knowledge assets.鈥