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The Smallest Salable Patent-Practicing Unit (‘SSPPU’) Experiment, General Purpose Technologies and the Coase Theorem

 |  February 25, 2016

Posted by Social Science Research Network

The Smallest Salable Patent-Practicing Unit (‘SSPPU’) Experiment, General Purpose Technologies and the Coase Theorem

Nicolas Petit (University of Liege)

Abstract:     In the last years, some Standard-Setting Organizations (“SSOs”) active in wireless communications have experimented new pricing principles for standard essential patents (“SEPs”). One of those experiments is the “SSPPU” rule. Under SSPPU, the licensing rates paid to owners of SEPs for the use of their technology shall reflect the “value that the functionality of the claimed invention or inventive feature…contributes to the value of the relevant functionality of the smallest saleable Compliant Implementation that practices the Essential Patent Claim”. This paper reviews the SSPPU experiment through the lenses of the Coase theorem. It finds that SSPPU interferes with the efficient operation of the price system, and is likely to reduce investment in socially beneficial activities, including in General Purpose Technologies (“GPTs”) which are key drivers of economic growth.