facklerfig2.jpg
VoxEU Column Industrial organisation Productivity and Innovation

How antitrust enforcement can spur innovation: Bell Labs and the 1956 Consent Decree

There is growing concern that dominant companies use patents strategically to keep competitors from entering their market. This column uses the landmark 1956 Consent Decree against Bell Labs to explore whether antitrust enforcement is an effective remedy to the problem. Results show that patents can indeed be used as an entry barrier for start-up firms, and that the compulsory licensing of patents can foster market entry and innovation. However, compulsory licensing is found to be ineffective in markets where dominant firms have other means of market foreclosure.

Innovation is a key driver of economic growth, and the patent system is one of the main instruments governments use to foster innovation. However, there is growing concern that dominant companies might use patents strategically to deny potential entrants – often small, technology-oriented start-ups – access to key technologies in an attempt to keep out competitors.1 As start-ups are thought to generate more radical innovations than established firms, this practice may harm technological progress and economic growth.

The growth of technology companies and their aggressive behaviour in patent disputes has raised concerns that patents in the hands of big business might be harmful to innovation. According to The New York Times, patents are used in the technology industry as “swords” to put pressure on competitors (Duhigg and Lohr 2012), and The Economist (2015) observed that “[p]atents should spur bursts of innovation; instead, they are used to lock in incumbents’ advantages”. Many critics have called for antitrust policies as a remedy to this problem, arguing that it is time that antitrust policy puts innovation front and centre (Wu 2012, Waller and Sag 2014).2

In a recent research project, we explore whether patents held by a dominant firm are harmful for follow-on innovation, and if so, whether antitrust enforcement in the form of compulsory licensing of patents provides an effective remedy (Watzinger et al. 2017).

Watch Monika Schnitzer discuss how patents affect innovation in the video below

The antitrust lawsuit against Bell

To answer these questions, we study one of the most important antitrust rulings in US history, namely, the 1956 consent decree against the Bell System. This decree settled a seven-year old antitrust lawsuit that sought to break up the Bell System, the dominant provider of telecommunications services in the US, because it allegedly monopolised “the manufacture, distribution, and sale of telephones, telephone apparatus and equipment” (Antitrust Subcommittee 1958: 1668). Bell was charged with having foreclosed competitors from the market for telecommunications equipment because its operating companies had exclusive supply contracts with its manufacturing subsidiary Western Electric and because it used exclusionary practices such as the refusal to license its patents.

The consent decree contained two main remedies. The Bell System was obligated to license all its patents royalty free, and it was barred from entering any industry other than telecommunications. As a consequence, 7,820 patents, or 1.3% of all unexpired US patents, in a wide range of fields became freely available in 1956. Most of these patents covered technologies from the Bell Laboratories (Bell Labs), the research subsidiary of the Bell System, arguably the most innovative industrial laboratory in the world at the time. The Bell Labs produced path-breaking innovations in telecommunications such as cellular telephone technology or the first transatlantic telephone cable. But as Figure 1 shows, 58% of Bell's patent portfolio had its main application outside of telecommunications because of Bell's part in the war effort in WWII and its commitment to basic science. Researchers at Bell Labs are credited for the invention of the transistor, the solar cell, and the laser, among other things.

Figure 1 Bell patents subject to compulsory licensing by industry

The broad patent portfolio of Bell gives us the opportunity to measure how the effect of compulsory licensing depends on the competitive setting. In the telecommunications industry, Bell was a vertically integrated monopolist who allegedly foreclosed rivals. In the industries outside of telecommunications, Bell held patents but was not an active market participant.

Compulsory licensing increased follow-on innovation, in particular by start-ups

Our research shows that compulsory licensing increased follow-on innovation that builds on Bell patents. We measure follow-on innovation by the number of patent citations Bell Labs patents received from other companies that patent in the US. We find that in the first five years, follow-on innovation increased by 17%, or a total of around 1,000 citations. Back-of-the-envelope calculations suggest that the additional patents other companies filed as a direct result of the consent decree had a value of up to $5.7 billion in today's dollars.3

More than two-thirds of the increase in innovation can be attributed to young and small companies and individual inventors unrelated to Bell. This is in line with the hypothesis that patents can act as a barrier to entry for small and young companies who are less able to strike licensing deals than large firms (Lanjouw and Schankerman 2004, Galasso 2012, Galasso and Schankerman 2015). Compulsory licensing removed this barrier in markets outside the telecommunications industry, arguably unintentionally so. This fostered follow-on innovation by young and small companies and contributed to long run technological progress in the US.

Compulsory licensing did not end market foreclosure in the telecommunications industry

The aim of the antitrust settlement was to increase competition and innovation in the telecommunications industry. We do not find this to be the case. In Figure 2 we compare the increase in innovations for patents sorted by how close the technology of these patents is to the telecommunications industry. The size of the bubbles represents the size of the patent portfolio of Bell in each technology. We find that almost all innovation increases come from patents that have nothing to do with telecommunications. This suggests that compulsory licensing is not an effective remedy to end market foreclosure.

This pattern is consistent with historical records that Bell continued to use exclusionary practices in the telecommunications industry after the consent decree took effect and that these exclusionary practices impeded innovation (Wu 2012). As no structural remedies were imposed Bell continued to control not only the production of telephone equipment but was – in the form of the Bell operating companies – also its own customer. This made competing with Bell in the telecommunications equipment market unattractive even after compulsory licensing facilitated access to Bell's technology. For example, the Bell operating companies refused to connect any telephone that was not produced by Western Electric, the manufacturing subsidiary of the Bell System (Temin and Galambos 1987: 222). In other industries, compulsory licensing was effective in fostering innovation by young and small companies since Bell as the supplier of technology did not control the product markets through vertical integration or via exclusive contracts.

Figure 2 Follow-on innovations for patents with different levels of closeness to telecommunications

The consent decree increased US innovation in the long run

Although the 1956 consent decree was not effective in ending market foreclosure, it permanently increased the scale of US innovation. In the first five years alone, the number of patents increased by 25% in fields with compulsorily licensed patents compared to technologically similar fields without; and it continued to increase thereafter. This increase is again driven by small and new companies outside the telecommunications industry. We find only a small increase in patents related to the production of telecommunications equipment. This indicates that market foreclosure may slow down technological progress.

Outside the telecommunications industry, however, the consent decree had a long-lasting stimulating effect. By providing free state-of-the-art technology to all US companies, compulsory licensing increased US innovation because it opened up new markets for a large number of entrants. This interpretation is consistent with historical accounts. Gordon Moore, the co-founder of Intel, stated that “[o]ne of the most important developments for the commercial semiconductor industry (...) was the antitrust suit filed against [the Bell System] in 1949 (...) which allowed the merchant semiconductor industry “to really get started” in the United States (...) [T]here is a direct connection between the liberal licensing policies of Bell Labs and people such as Gordon Teal leaving Bell Labs to start Texas Instruments and William Shockley doing the same thing to start, with the support of Beckman Instruments, Shockley Semiconductor in Palo Alto. This (...) started the growth of Silicon Valley” (Wessner et al 2001: 86). Similarly, Peter Grindley and David Teece opined that “[AT&T's licensing policy shaped by antitrust policy] remains one of the most unheralded contributions to economic development – possibly far exceeding the Marshall plan in terms of wealth generation it established abroad and in the United States“ (Grindley and Teece 1997).

Implications

Our research highlights that patents held by a dominant firm can be harmful for follow-on innovation. Compulsory licensing can help to foster market entry and stimulate innovation in the short and the long run. Yet, if a dominant company can use other exclusionary practices to keep out innovative start-ups, compulsory licensing is ineffective. This suggests that an antitrust policy concerned with innovation should recognise exclusion as a core concern of competition policy and put the protection of market entrants front and centre.

References

Antitrust Subcommittee (1958) “Consent decree program of the Department of Justice”, American Telephone & Tel. Subcommittee - hearings before the Antitrust Subcommittee. US House Committee on the Judiciary, Committee on the Judiciary Serial No 9.

Duhigg, C and S Lohr (2012) “The patent, used as a sword”, The New York Times, 7 October.

Economist (2015) “Time to fix patents”, 8 August.

Galasso, A (2012) “Broad cross-license negotiations”, Journal of Economics & Management Strategy, 21(4): 873–911.

Galasso, A and M Schankerman (2015) “Patents and cumulative innovation: Causal  evidence from the courts”, The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 130(1): 317–369.

Grindley, P C and D J Teece (1997) “Licensing and cross-licensing in semiconductors and electronics”, California Management Review, 39(2): 8–41.

Lanjouw, J O and M Schankerman (2004) “Protecting intellectual property rights: Are small firms handicapped?”, Journal of Law and Economics, 47(1): 45–74.

Temin, P and L Galambos (1987) The fall of the Bell system: A study in prices and politics, Cambridge University Press.

Waller, S W and M Sag (2014) “Promoting innovation”, Iowa Law Review, 100: 2223–2247.

Watzinger, M, T A Fackler, M Nagler and M Schnitzer (2017) “How antitrust enforcement can spur innovation: Bell Labs and the 1956 Consent Decree”, CEPR, Discussion paper 11793.

Wessner, C W et al (2001) Capitalizing on new needs and new opportunities: Government-industry partnerships in biotechnology and information technologies, National Academies Press, chapter 2.

Wu, T (2012) “Taking innovation seriously: Antitrust enforcement if innovation mattered most”, Antitrust Law Journal, 78(2): 313–328.

Endnotes

[1] Derek Thompson, “America's Monopoly Problem”, The Atlantic, October 2016; Robert B. Reich, “Big Tech Has Become Way Too Powerful,” The New York Times, 18 September 2015; Michael Katz and Carl Shapiro “Breaking up Big Tech Would Harm Consumer,” The New York Times, 28 September 2015; Thomas Catan “When Patent, Antitrust Worlds Collide,” Wall Street Journal, 14 November 2011.

[2] Refer for example Robert B. Reich, “Big Tech Has Become Way Too Powerful”, The New York Times, 18 September  2015; Michael Katz and Carl Shapiro “Breaking up Big Tech Would Harm Consumer”, The New York Times, 28 September 2015; “The Experts: Does the Patent System Encourage Innovation?”, The Wall Street Journal, 16 March 2013; Thomas Catan “When Patent, Antitrust Worlds Collide”, November 14, 2011

[3] While the antitrust lawsuit led to a quicker diffusion of the transistor technology, transistor patents do not drive the effect in our main sample.  

3,674 Reads