The Hoax of Invention History
by
Jeffrey A. Tucker
All popular
business histories are replete with lies. Or to be more charitable,
they are filled with untruths based on a stupid version of cause
and effect: inventions happen because people take out a patent on
them. This assumption is hardly ever questioned in the mainline
literature. Writers look through patent records and assume that
they are a record of technological advance.
The truth is
far messier. The patent records are a snap shot of those who filed
a patent, and nothing more.
It is because
of patent-based historiography that people believe that the Wright
Brothers invented the airplane, when in fact they made only a tiny
contribution of combining wing warping with a rudder. It was Sir
George Cayley in Britain and Otto Lilienthal of Germany who did
the bulk of the work of inventing the airplane. But it was the Wright
Brothers who applied for the patent and quickly used it against
Glenn Curtiss who improved wing warping with movable control surfaces.
So it was with
the radio, which is conventionally attributed to Guglielmo Marconi,
the Nobel Prize winner in 1909. What about the contribution of Oliver
Lodge in the UK or the forgotten genius Nikola Tesla or the Russian
Aleksander Popov or the British Naval engineer Henry B. Jackson?
All Marconi
did was ground the antenna, and also manage to win the patent wars
thanks to the deep pockets of fellow aristocrat and partner Andrew
Carnegie. Fifty years after the patent was granted, the Supreme
Court conceded that it was unjustly given but by then, the other
claimants were dead! (Marconi was consistent at least: he was a
big supporter of fascism in Italy.)
Then there
is the famous myth about Alexander Bell that displaced knowledge
of the real inventor of the telephone, Antonio Meucci. But Meucci
couldn't afford the fee to file the patent. This oversight was fixed
in a 2002 declaration by the U.S. Congress but just a bit too late.
There are an
unlimited number of such cases that lead to fundamental questioning
of the relationship between patents and innovation. It turns out
that there are very few great leaps forward in history that are
the result of a single Prometheus-style figure. Most advances are
the cooperative work of many factors alive in society, with individuals
improving things a bit at a time until all those improvements come
together in a marketable form.
The
patent has essentially nothing to do with it. And Boldin and Levine,
in Against
Intellectual Monopoly, are hardly the first to point this
out. You might be surprised to know that many academic economists
have done empirical studies on the relationship between patents
and economic advance. Of all those studies they reviewed, 23 in
total, they found none that could establish a strong relationship
and many that found negative relationships between patents and development:
that is, that patents actually impede progress.
What they further
find is that the main contribution of patents is to increase the
production of patents. But that is not the same as increasing invention,
for the main use of the patent is to put a stop to any similar innovation
that builds upon and improves the patented thing. The patent holder
rides high for a time but history is actually frozen in place. The
process of imitation and sharing that led to the innovation becomes
formalized, centralized, fixed, and stagnant.
They examine
the case of databases, which are patented in Europe but not in the
United States. The U.S. wins the competition easily. The American
dominance of database production runs 2.5:1 compared with Europe.
To me, this helps explain what many have noticed, namely that Europe
is seriously behind in its digitalization and organization of information,
with most Europeans possessing oddly antiquated intellectual capital
concerning even the most basic databasing skills. Now we know: it's
not their fault; it’s the fault of their IP regimes.
Thus does chapter
eight of Against
Intellectual Monopoly discuss all the existing literature
that makes the case – on purpose or inadvertently – against patents.
It is packed with empirical detail, but in particular I'm intrigued
at their review of the history of musical composition in England
and Europe in the 18th and 19th centuries.
They
find that the countries with no copyright legislation (German territories
in particular) had more composers per capita than countries like
England. And in England in particular, the 1750 law had the effect
of bringing the entire composition industry to a grinding halt.
And later, when copyright was imposed on Italy and France, it led
to a diminution of composer effort.
This demonstration
is intriguing beyond most music historians can possibly imagine.
It solves a long-running mystery as how it came to be that the most
musically educated population in the world, one with a massive history
of compositional genius, would suddenly fail to participate in the
progress that defined the age of Mozart and Beethoven. These historians
just haven't known where to look for clues.
This chapter
makes me sad for all the great innovators whose names are not in
the history books, and even sadder for all of us who have been denied
great innovations because some fool managed to make it to the patent
office first only to use that privilege to kill his competition
the next day. Far from encouraging innovation, patent and copyright
have managed to kill off so many wonderful works of art and technologies
that it boggles the mind. In order to understand this, you have
to look beyond the patent records. You have to train yourself to
look at the unseen costs of government regulation.
February
5, 2009
Jeffrey
Tucker [send him mail]
is editorial vice president of www.Mises.org.
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