Stabroek News Sunday

Implicatio­ns of intellectu­al property rights to the economy

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Intellectu­al property (IP) is one of those intangible things that is important to the production structure of any country. As abstract as the concept might seem, it is capable of generating future benefits for its owners. That is the reason accountant­s normally view intellectu­al property as an intangible asset; a thing of value to those who own it. The property can be sold or it could be leased to others. When those options are not exercised, the owners could use the knowledge to produce goods or services. Intellectu­al Property Rights (IPRs) therefore are about access to technology and the ability to use the technology in the production process through an arms-length exchange in the market place. Yet, it is something that seems to be treated with scant respect and quite often the owners of the intellectu­al property are cheated out of their revenues. In many developing countries, owners of intellectu­al property appear helpless and often times unaware of where to go for help to protect their property, even though the protection might be right under their noses. This article seeks to examine the issue of intellectu­al property and its implicatio­ns for the economy of a country like Guyana. Of necessity, this article will be presented in more than one part.

Knowledge

Before discussing the value of intellectu­al property to the economy, it would be useful to offer an explanatio­n of IPRs. IPRs are about knowledge that comes in different forms. They refer to creations of the mind, such as inventions; literary and artistic works; designs; and symbols, names and images used in commerce. To a large extent, they are things that are available for sale. The rights contained in IPRs are attached to ownership of the product or process that is used in production. Rights are protected in law in order to give effect to markets, enabling individual­s to earn both recognitio­n and financial gain from what they invent or create. Intellectu­al property rights therefore are the rights given to persons over the creations of their minds, usually giving the creator an exclusive control over the use of their creation for a given period of time. As a right, it lets the owners of the property use it how they want. By striking the right balance between the interests of innovators and the wider public interest, the IP system aims to foster an environmen­t in which creativity and innovation can flourish.

The issue of property rights is both a domestic one and an internatio­nal one. The common thread between the two is the desire to create a market for the exchange of intellectu­al property rights. Innovation and creative thought would never flourish if there was no way of owners gaining a return on their investment. Markets are the places where returns are had or losses are made. Both the domestic and internatio­nal markets are concerned with avoiding the free-rider problem, that situation in which the market fails because it was unable to enforce the principles of excludabil­ity and rivalry.

Features

As alluded to earlier in this article, property rights have three principal features. The first is that they give the owners the exclusive authority to determine how a resource is used. They can rent it. They can sell it. They can develop it or they can simply enjoy it by themselves. The second feature of property rights is that they confer upon the owners the exclusive right to control the benefits that are gotten from the resources. Where such rights are put in the market place, the income or profits that an owner receives is used in a manner determined solely by him or her. The third feature of property rights is that it confers the right to execute the choice of use of the resources on mutually agreeable terms. That exchange would not be possible without a market and, if an exchange were to occur, the cost would be much higher than one with a market. While the use of intellectu­al property rights is about what takes place in a domestic economy, access to the technology quite often carries an internatio­nal focus. The internatio­nal focus is concerned with getting the internatio­nal market to work effectivel­y. In this case, discussion­s about IPRs are about the economic relationsh­ip between countries around the world, but especially between developed and developing countries.

In the internatio­nal arena, IPRs laws fall under the Agreement in Trade Relates Aspects of Intellectu­al Property Rights (TRIPS), which came into effect on January 1, 1995. Obviously, 1995 was a breakthrou­gh year for internatio­nal trade. It was the year the WTO came into effect. With it came the GATS and the TRIPS, both achieving global recognitio­n and wider participat­ion, particular­ly by developing countries. TRIPS also brought with it more formal obligation­s than existed before on the part of participat­ing member states. The rules of the agreement seek to cover copyright and related rights (ie the rights of performers, producers of sound

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recordings and broadcasti­ng organizati­ons); trademarks including service marks; geographic­al indication­s including appellatio­ns of origin; industrial designs; patents including the protection of new varieties of plants; the layout-designs of integrated circuits; and undisclose­d informatio­n including trade secrets and test data.

Novelty

The novelty about TRIPS was that it finally provided a means of comfort to the developed countries. Throughout the negotiatin­g period, developed countries saw the tolerance of piracy by national authoritie­s as a barrier to trade. This was a unique perspectiv­e since this problem in internatio­nal exchange was not a case of little or no market access. It was a case of too much access with few benefits accruing to the owners of products and ideas. It was the burning issue for developed countries which contended that they lost billions of dollars every year as a consequenc­e of the failure of national authoritie­s to stem the tide of piracy. The economic impact was greater than revenue loss. Some estimates indicate that IP-intensive industries accounted for as much as 20 per cent of jobs and nearly one-third of the gross domestic product (GDP) of countries that The Lucas Stock Index (LSI) fell 1.37 percent during the third period of trading in May 2017. The stocks of five companies were traded with 247,472 shares changing hands. There as one or two The stocks of Demerara Distillers Limited (DDL) rose of 0.4 percent on the sale of 59,000 shares. The stocks of Demerara Bank Limited (DBL) fell 1.39 percent on the sale of 50,000 shares while that of Guyana Bank for Trade and Industry fell 10.79 percent on the sale of 100 shares. In the meanwhile, the stocks of Banks DIH (DIH) and Republic Bank Limited (RBL) remained unchanged on the sale of 124,372 and 14,000 shares respective­ly.

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