Intellectual Property and the End of Work

C. Hrdy
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Abstract

The conventional wisdom is that intellectual property (IP) is good for jobs. Indeed, according to legislators and the U.S. patent office, IP “creates jobs.” But this is not quite right. The purpose of IP is to increase the amount of innovation in the economy. Yet a significant subset of the innovations protected by IP, from self-service kiosks to self-driving cars, are in fact labor-saving. They reduce the amount of human labor required to complete a task. Therefore, to the extent IP is successful at incentivizing innovation, IP actually contributes to job loss. More precisely, IP contributes to what this article terms technological un/employment: job loss, and job creation, resulting from technological change. Commentators concerned about the “end of work” have suggested using taxation to slow down the pace of automation and provide aid to displaced workers. But this article yields another surprising insight: IP law itself could be designed to effectuate similar goals, either alone or in coordination with the tax system. For example, rather than taxing businesses that employ robots, legislators could deny patents on robots, or tax IP owners and use the proceeds to fund social programs like a universal basic income. IP’s relationship to technological un/employment, and the implications for public policy, seem obvious in hindsight. Yet the connection has been overlooked. Lawyers and academics who study IP must pay more attention.
知识产权和工作的终结
传统观点认为,知识产权(IP)有利于就业。事实上,根据立法者和美国专利局的说法,知识产权“创造了就业机会”。但这并不完全正确。知识产权的目的是增加经济中创新的数量。然而,从自助服务亭到自动驾驶汽车,受知识产权保护的创新中有很大一部分实际上是节省劳动力的。它们减少了完成一项任务所需的人力劳动量。因此,在某种程度上,知识产权成功地激励了创新,知识产权实际上导致了失业。更准确地说,知识产权促成了本文所称的技术失业:技术变革导致的失业和就业创造。担心“工作终结”的评论人士建议利用税收来减缓自动化的步伐,并为失业工人提供援助。但这篇文章产生了另一个令人惊讶的见解:知识产权法本身也可以被设计成实现类似的目标,要么单独实施,要么与税收系统协同实施。例如,立法者可以不向使用机器人的企业征税,而是拒绝授予机器人专利,或者向知识产权所有者征税,并将所得用于资助全民基本收入等社会项目。事后看来,知识产权与技术失业的关系及其对公共政策的影响似乎是显而易见的。然而,这种联系被忽视了。研究知识产权的律师和学者必须多加关注。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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