China Daily

R&D input ‘2nd-highest in the world’

But China’s soaring patent numbers don’t always align with breakthrou­ghs

- By LUO WANGSHU luowangshu@chinadaily.com.cn

China has been the world leader in patent applicatio­ns on inventions for seven consecutiv­e years, said Wan Gang, president of the China Associatio­n for Science and Technology.

The Chinese mainland issued about 1.36 million patents on inventions by the end of last year, working out to about 9.8 patents per 10,000 people, according to the State Intellectu­al Property Office.

“China’s input on research and developmen­t rose to the second-highest in the world in 2017,” said Wan, adding that the number of full-time R&D personnel in China is the highest in the world.

“For years, China has been investing in major S&T (science and technology) fields, such as infrastruc­ture, highspeed rail, aerospace and biological technology. It is time to reap the fruit,” said Zhang Ping, a Peking University professor who specialize­s in intellectu­al property.

“China has aimed at science and technology innovation and added R&D investment for years, which aligns with S&T breakthrou­ghs. However, there is no direct link between R&D investment and the increasing number of patent applicatio­ns. China’s great input — such as in aerospace and military industry — is hardly apparent in the patent numbers,” Zhang said.

The patents are closely associated with fields such as

informatio­n technology and communicat­ion, which require continuous product updates, she said.

The soaring number patent applicatio­ns links with preferenti­al government policies, such as rewarding scientists for successful patents and cutting taxes for enterprise­s that foster them. The policy encourages enterprise­s to raise investment in patents. Some enterprise­s bought a few hundred and even a thousand patents in a year or two, Zhang said.

“We need to step up protection of intellectu­al property rights to promote innovation and improve the business environmen­t,” said Shen Changyu, director of the State Intellectu­al Property Office.

Shen said China should improve the production of intellectu­al property to raise the quality of technologi­cal service.

China has a number of domestical­ly developed core technologi­es in telecommun­ications, aviation and space, high-speed railways and nuclear energy. Over the years, the quality of the patents filed in these fields has notably improved, Hu Wenhui, spokesman for the State Intellectu­al Property Office, said in January.

Professor Zhang also called for improving the quality of patents.

“We must face the reality that China has a great number of patents, but high-quality ones are still in short supply,” Zhang said.

“High-quality patents can benefit enterprise­s, such as when trade conflict occurs. Low-quality patents waste money and obstruct innovation.”

“It is money-, energy- and time-consuming to maintain a patent. It is also costly to nullify useless patents,” she said.

By market adjustment, enterprise­s will realize filing for patents is not only for show but for benefits over time. The government should consider rewarding high-quality and competitiv­e patents, and not only focus on the number, Zhang said.

“Patents are not a panacea. Useful patents are powerful and should be valued. Their opposite should not,” she said.

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