ABSTRACT: If trade secrets are weakly protected by law, firms risk losing their valuable information when employees are hired by competitors. It may therefore be optimal to limit the number of employees who share the trade secrets even if it reduces the firm's productive efficiency. The benefits of limited information sharing are greatest if the efficiency cost is low and the competition in the market is neither very tough nor very weak. It is shown that it is more profitable to reduce the information sharing by giving the employees different information than by giving some employees more information than others. Copyright (c) 2001 Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Excerpts and Summaries
Created
Wednesday 05 of March, 2008 01:26:10 GMT by Unknown
LastModif
Monday 13 of October, 2008 19:41:23 GMT by Unknown