Beijing Review

Advances in IPR Protection

-

China’s record of intellectu­al property right (IPR) protection has been unfairly criticized by some sections of the internatio­nal community for various reasons, such as infringeme­nts or theft of intellectu­al property. This, however, cannot negate the rapid progress the country has made in developmen­t and protection of intellectu­al property. On the occasion of the 2020 World Intellectu­al Property Day, which was April 26, the National Intellectu­al Property Administra­tion (NIPA) released informatio­n on the developmen­t of China’s IPR system in 2019. Facts show that the Chinese legal system for IPR protection has been greatly strengthen­ed. In 2019, China issued the Opinions on Strengthen­ing the Protection of Intellectu­al Property Rights, completed an amendment to the Trademark Law, increased the amount of statutory compensati­on for malicious infringeme­nts upon trademarks, and formulated or revised multiple regulation­s and rules regarding patent licensing, patent agent examinatio­n and trademark applicatio­n, among others.

China is also increasing­ly cracking down on violations of IPR laws and regulation­s. In 2019, the country launched targeted campaigns such as Iron Fist, Sword Net, Net Sword and Dragon Fly. Procurator­ates across the country approved arrest of 7,430 persons in 4,346 criminal cases of IPR infringeme­nt. The level of public satisfacti­on with IPR protection in China increased to 78.89 points out of 100.

Some believe the progress in China’s IPR protection is a result of the internatio­nal community’s pressure on the Chinese Government. In fact, China is strengthen­ing

IPR protection not just to promote internatio­nal cooperatio­n, but also to serve its own developmen­t.

NIPA figures show that in 2019, there were 1.86 million invention patents registered in the Chinese mainland, or 13.3 patents per 10,000 people; China filed 59,000 internatio­nal patent applicatio­ns via the Patent Cooperatio­n Treaty, becoming the world’s top patent filer; the country also filed 6,339 internatio­nal trademark registrati­on applicatio­ns via the Madrid System, the internatio­nal registrati­on of trademarks, ranking third globally and the first among middleinco­me economies. China has become a veritable major country in terms of intellectu­al property developmen­t.

China’s intellectu­al property developmen­t and progress urgently requires the strengthen­ing of IPR protection. In the week around every year’s World Intellectu­al Property Day, China’s intellectu­al property authoritie­s hold publicity activities for the public to get to know the latest intellectu­al property developmen­t in China, the Ipr-related laws and severe punishment for violation of these laws. Compared with two or three decades ago, the public in China is more aware of protecting IPRS.

Although China has already become a major IPR country, it is still not an IPR powerhouse yet. Take the patent-intensive industry as an example, which indicates the effect of a country’s innovation-driven developmen­t. In 2019, the added value of patent-intensive industries accounted for 16.1 percent of the GDP in the EU, while the proportion was only 11.6 percent in China. China still has a long way to go in IPR developmen­t and protection.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China