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Copyright's Excess
Money and Music in the US Recording Industry
Tests copyright's fundamental premise that more money will increase creative output using the US recording industry from 1962–2015.
Glynn Lunney (Author)
9781316632796, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 12 April 2018
248 pages, 46 b/w illus. 12 tables
22.9 x 15.1 x 1.4 cm, 0.36 kg
'Copyright's Excess is foundational work in the economics of intellectual property.' Jotwell
For more than two hundred years, copyright in the United States has rested on a simple premise: more copyright will lead to more money for copyright owners, and more money will lead to more original works of authorship. In this important, illuminating book, Glynn Lunney tests that premise by tracking the rise and fall of the sound recording copyright from 1961–2015, along with the associated rise and fall in sales of recorded music. Far from supporting copyright's fundamental premise, the empirical evidence finds the exact opposite relationship: more revenue led to fewer and lower-quality hit songs. Lunney's breakthrough research shows that what copyright does is vastly increase the earnings of our most popular artists and songs, which - net result - means fewer hit songs. This book should be read by anyone interested in how copyright operates in the real world.
1. Introduction
2. The (surprisingly weak) economic case for copyright
3. Copyright and revenue in the recording industry
4. Measuring music output
5. The search for a correlation: was more money associated with more or better music?
6. More money meant less music
7. Rationalizing copyright.
Subject Areas: Intellectual property law [LNR], Law [L], Music industry [KNTF]
