China Daily (Hong Kong)

Intellectu­al property must be better protected

- DURING THE FIFTH PLENARY SESSION

of the 12th National People’s Congress, China’s top legislatur­e, Huang Jianping, a deputy from South China’s Guangdong province, said the robust growth of virtual economy has taken a toll on bricks-and-mortar enterprise­s. Beijing News commented on Monday:

Huang, who is also the chairman of Guangdong Wonderful Ceramics Co Ltd, has good reason to fire away at the dark side of the internet-driven economy. Like many manufactur­ing veterans, he is infuriated by the fact that many online retailers, despite their blatant infringeme­nts of the intellectu­al property rights of other manufactur­ers, are not held accountabl­e due to the difficulty in holding them to account.

In fact, Jack Ma, founder of the e-commerce giant Alibaba Group, recently commented on the intellectu­al property rights issue, saying counterfei­ting should be dealt with in the way drunken driving has been handled. In other words, the root cause of the unruly counterfei­ting is that intellectu­al property is not under proper protection.

Countries at the early stages of industrial­ization are tempted to emulate the success of industrial leaders. In China’s case, when the reform and opening-up policy was launched in the late 1970s, resources were scarce and most citizens could not afford quality products. That explains why many copycats would focus on manufactur-

ing affordable goods even at the risk of violating other companies’ intellectu­al property rights.

Although the days of scarcity are in the past, the protection of intellectu­al property rights has made limited progress as enterprise­s are less motivated to pursue innovation­s. Being an industrial trailblaze­r, to some extent, means higher costs but not necessaril­y more gains because copycats can achieve more success simply by “improving” on their pioneering products.

Some enterprise­s put profitabil­ity in front of legality, especially when the production cost keeps rising these days. And even if they are caught the legal consequenc­es of their actions are limited.

The truth is that amid the country’s economic transition many primitive Chinese manufactur­ers are losing in the competitio­n with their Southeast Asian counterpar­ts, which have become more attractive to foreign investors that favor low-cost labor. It is lackluster innovation that has led to excessive capacity in China and dwindling profits in manufactur­ing, not the internet economy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China