Innovation Commons

Innovation Commons
Author: Jason Potts
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 281
Release: 2019
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0190937491

Innovation is among the most important topics in understanding economic sustained economic growth. Jason Potts argues that the initial stages of innovation require cooperation under uncertainty and draws from insights on the solving of commons problems to shed light on policies and conditions conducive to the creation of new firms and industries. The problems of innovation commons are overcome, Potts shows, when there are governance institutions that incentivize cooperation, thereby facilitating the pooling of distributed information, knowledge, and other inputs. The entrepreneurial discovery of an economic opportunity is thus an emergent institution resulting from the formation of a cooperative group, under conditions of extreme uncertainty, working toward the mutual purpose of opportunity discovery about a nascent technology or new idea. Among the problems commons address are those of the identity; cooperation; consent; monitoring; punishment; and independence. A commons is efficient compared to the creation of alternative economic institutions that involve extensive contracting and networks, private property rights and price signals, or public goods (i.e. firms, markets, and governments). In other words, the origin of innovation is not entrepreneurial action per se, but the creation of a common pool resource from which entrepreneurs can discover opportunities. Potts' framework draws on the evolutionary theory of cooperation and institutional theory of the commons. It also has important implications for understanding the origin of firms and industries, and for the design of innovation policy. Beginning with a discussion of problems of knowledge and coordination as well as their implications for common pool environments, the book then explores instances of innovation commons and the lifecycle of innovation, including increased institutionalization and rigidness. Potts also discusses the possible implications of the commons framework for policies to sustain innovation dynamics.

The Innovation Commons - Why it Exists, What it Does, Who it Benefits, and How

The Innovation Commons - Why it Exists, What it Does, Who it Benefits, and How
Author: Darcy W E. Allen
Publisher:
Total Pages: 18
Release: 2018
Genre:
ISBN:

We propose a new type of commons - an 'innovation commons' - that is an emergent institutional solution to 'the innovation problem' (defined as a collective action problem, not a market failure problem). In an innovation commons entrepreneurs pool innovation resources (i.e. inputs into the innovation process) under defined access and governance rules. Innovation requires entrepreneurship, which requires information about market opportunities. This information has interesting characteristics that lend itself to becoming a common pool resource: it is dispersed about the economy; difficult to value in its parts; and largely produced through experiment and experience. Moreover, this information resource fits poorly in institutions of markets or states because uncertainty renders them comparatively costly. We show how the innovation commons solves this problem as a temporary institution that forms around a particular new idea at the very beginning of an innovation trajectory where uncertainty is highest.

Innovation Commons

Innovation Commons
Author: Jason Potts
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2019-07-02
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0190937521

Innovation is among the most important topics in understanding economic sustained economic growth. Jason Potts argues that the initial stages of innovation require cooperation under uncertainty and draws from insights on the solving of commons problems to shed light on policies and conditions conducive to the creation of new firms and industries. The problems of innovation commons are overcome, Potts shows, when there are governance institutions that incentivize cooperation, thereby facilitating the pooling of distributed information, knowledge, and other inputs. The entrepreneurial discovery of an economic opportunity is thus an emergent institution resulting from the formation of a cooperative group, under conditions of extreme uncertainty, working toward the mutual purpose of opportunity discovery about a nascent technology or new idea. Among the problems commons address are those of the identity; cooperation; consent; monitoring; punishment; and independence. A commons is efficient compared to the creation of alternative economic institutions that involve extensive contracting and networks, private property rights and price signals, or public goods (i.e. firms, markets, and governments). In other words, the origin of innovation is not entrepreneurial action per se, but the creation of a common pool resource from which entrepreneurs can discover opportunities. Potts' framework draws on the evolutionary theory of cooperation and institutional theory of the commons. It also has important implications for understanding the origin of firms and industries, and for the design of innovation policy. Beginning with a discussion of problems of knowledge and coordination as well as their implications for common pool environments, the book then explores instances of innovation commons and the lifecycle of innovation, including increased institutionalization and rigidness. Potts also discusses the possible implications of the commons framework for policies to sustain innovation dynamics.

The Innovation Commons

The Innovation Commons
Author: Jason Potts
Publisher:
Total Pages: 18
Release: 2016
Genre:
ISBN:

An innovation commons is an institutional solution to the innovation problem in which knowledge, information and resources are pooled under defined governance rules to enable a particular community access to those inputs into innovation, often in a context of peer production. This paper examines the economics of why and when the commons is an effective institutional solution to the innovation problem. I set out four basic models of the innovation commons: (1) dual-commons; (2) evolution of cooperation; (3) strategic defence; (4) uncertainty of idea type. I suggest how innovation policy might look like were it were to recognise the contribution of the innovation commons.

The Cambridge Handbook of Commons Research Innovations

The Cambridge Handbook of Commons Research Innovations
Author: Sheila R. Foster
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 566
Release: 2021-11-11
Genre: Law
ISBN: 1108944949

The commons theory, first articulated by Elinor Ostrom, is increasingly used as a framework to understand and rethink the management and governance of many kinds of shared resources. These resources can include natural and digital properties, cultural goods, knowledge and intellectual property, and housing and urban infrastructure, among many others. In a world of increasing scarcity and demand - from individuals, states, and markets - it is imperative to understand how best to induce cooperation among users of these resources in ways that advance sustainability, affordability, equity, and justice. This volume reflects this multifaceted and multidisciplinary field from a variety of perspectives, offering new applications and extensions of the commons theory, which is as diverse as the scholars who study it and is still developing in exciting ways.

The Subjective Political Economy of the Innovation Commons

The Subjective Political Economy of the Innovation Commons
Author: Darcy W E Allen
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2017
Genre:
ISBN:

How can private governance in innovation commons (Allen and Potts 2016a, 2016b) be reconciled with the mainstream conception of innovation and entrepreneurship as suffering a market failure requiring state intervention? This paper situates the private collective action governance of entrepreneurial discovery within its political economy context using the methods of new comparative economics. The institutional possibility frontier (IPF) -- a framework for understanding comparative institutional choice as a trade-off between the costs of disorder and dictatorship (Djankov et al. 2003; Shleifer 2005) -- extended and applied to answer this question. Subjective costs are incorporated into the IPF and thereby into the political economy choice of the governance of innovation resources. The result is a subjective innovation institutional possibility frontier. Placing the findings of this dissertation within this framework implies the potential over-weighting of costs of 'disorder' in governing entrepreneurial resources in the innovation commons. This discrepancy also implies that 'ideas' and 'rhetoric' have a role in developing a robust and effective institutional mix for innovation policy, which is itself a discovery process over subjective costs.

The Future of Ideas

The Future of Ideas
Author: Lawrence Lessig
Publisher: Vintage
Total Pages: 378
Release: 2002-10-22
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 0375726446

The Internet revolution has come. Some say it has gone. In The Future of Ideas, Lawrence Lessig explains how the revolution has produced a counterrevolution of potentially devastating power and effect. Creativity once flourished because the Net protected a commons on which widest range of innovators could experiment. But now, manipulating the law for their own purposes, corporations have established themselves as virtual gatekeepers of the Net while Congress, in the pockets of media magnates, has rewritten copyright and patent laws to stifle creativity and progress. Lessig weaves the history of technology and its relevant laws to make a lucid and accessible case to protect the sanctity of intellectual freedom. He shows how the door to a future of ideas is being shut just as technology is creating extraordinary possibilities that have implications for all of us. Vital, eloquent, judicious and forthright, The Future of Ideas is a call to arms that we can ill afford to ignore.

Matching Ideas to Institutions Under Uncertainty

Matching Ideas to Institutions Under Uncertainty
Author: Jason Potts
Publisher:
Total Pages: 19
Release: 2015
Genre:
ISBN:

The theory of innovation policy widely neglects private uncertainty about optimal matching of an idea to an innovation institution for development. I argue that information pooling in the commons enables private uncertainty to be effectively resolved, prior to subsequent development in private or public innovation institutions. This suggests that the innovation commons may be a crucial institutional component of an innovation system in the early phase of an innovation trajectory, but also that it is likely to be a temporary phase.

The Origin of the Entrepreneur and the Role of the Innovation Commons

The Origin of the Entrepreneur and the Role of the Innovation Commons
Author: Darcy W E Allen
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2016
Genre:
ISBN:

We introduce the proto-entrepreneur as an economic agent who must first -- i.e., before acting entrepreneurially -- coordinate non-price information with others in order to reveal exploitable opportunities. Entrepreneurship, therefore, involves dual economic discovery problems, each of which may hold different efficient institutional solutions. Applying transaction cost economics logic to this problem, we reveal what we call an 'entrepreneurial fundamental transformation': while the entrepreneurial process begins with proto-entrepreneurs undertaking non-price coordination in polycentric collective action governance structures called innovation commons (Allen & Potts, 2016), it ends with integration in the hierarchical start-up firm. This governance shift, we argue, is the result of falling structural uncertainty -- as unknown complementary collaborators become known -- and rising idiosyncratic quasi-rents, both of which bring contracting hazards and move the economising structure towards the nascent firm.