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Séminaire d’économie de Bordeaux

 

Felix Poege

(Bocconi University)
 

Competition and Innovation: The Breakup of IG Farben

Abstract: The relationship between competition and innovation is difficult to disentangle, as exogenous variation in market structure is rare. The 1952 breakup of Germany’s leading chemical company, IG Farben, represents such a disruption. After the Second World War, the Allies occupying Germany imposed the breakup because of IG Farben’s importance for the German war economy instead of standard antitrust concerns. In technology areas where the breakup reduced concentration, patenting increased strongly, driven by domestic firms unrelated to IG Farben. In contrast, increases in product-level competition do not increase innovation, and the extent to which product markets related to a technology were affected by the breakup is unrelated to the increase in innovation. Similarly, neither the movement of IG Farben inventors nor an increased propensity to patent or duplication of research drive the effect. Descriptively, IG Farben’s successors increased their patenting activities as well, and their patenting specialized relative to the pre-breakup period. The results are consistent with a breakup-induced innovation increase by the IG Farben successors, which then spilled over to the wider chemical industry.
 

 

 

 

 

 

– Séminaire organisé par le programme 1 / BSE –
 

 

>> pour assister au séminaire via Zoom, contacter julie.vissaguet@u-bordeaux.fr

 
 

 

 

 

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