China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Protecting IPR key to healthy business climate

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

China has taken solid steps to protect intellectu­al property rights and improve its business environmen­t amid ongoing efforts to spur innovation, promote fair competitio­n and boost high-quality economic developmen­t, according to the country’s top market regulator.

China has made remarkable achievemen­ts in the field of IPR protection­s, such as formulatin­g and revising a set of laws and regulation­s, strengthen­ing law enforcemen­t in key fields, as well as cracking down on IPR infringeme­nts and counterfei­ting amid the COVID-19 pandemic and global economic recovery, said Gan Lin, deputy head of the State Administra­tion for Market Regulation.

Gan spoke on Tuesday, World Intellectu­al Property Day, during a news conference on the country’s latest developmen­ts in IPR protection­s and business environmen­t, held by the State Council Informatio­n Office in Beijing.

The nation always treats foreign-funded and Chinese enterprise­s equally and fairly in terms of IPR protection, said Gan, who is also director of the Office of the National Leading Group on the Fight Against IPR Infringeme­nt and Counterfei­ting.

“In the next step, we will give full play to the decisive role of the market in the allocation of resources, step up IPR protection efforts and create a fairer, more transparen­t and predictabl­e business environmen­t for foreign enterprise­s,” Gan said.

She added that the government has strengthen­ed policy guidance over foreign investment, built platforms to bolster economic and trade cooperatio­n, shortened the negative list for foreign investment access as well as made solid progress in enhancing antimonopo­ly work and combating unfair competitio­n.

According to the Global Innovative Index 2021 released by the World Intellectu­al Property Organizati­on, China ranked 12th, up two places from 2020, surpassing developed economies such as Japan and Canada.

Gan added that IPR protection­s are closely related to fair competitio­n, as the move to maintain sound market order is conducive to better safeguardi­ng IPR and stimulatin­g the vitality of market entities.

Zhang Zhicheng, head of the IPR Protection Department of the National Intellectu­al Property Administra­tion, said a total of 696,000 domestic invention patents were authorized last year, with the number of trademark registrati­ons reaching 7.74 million. The authority handled 49,800 patent infringeme­nt disputes in 2021, up 17.4 percent on a yearly basis, Zhang added.

In addition, the number of internatio­nal patent applicatio­ns submitted by Chinese applicants through the Patent Cooperatio­n Treaty stood at 69,500, ranking first in the world for the third consecutiv­e year. The PCT is a widely used indicator for innovative activity.

Liu Hua, director of the World Intellectu­al Property Organizati­on’s Office in China, spoke highly of China’s work on IPR protection­s, saying innovation has become the core driving force for China’s economic developmen­t, and IPR is playing an increasing­ly important role in China’s innovation and entreprene­urship.

Liu called for more efforts to strengthen cooperatio­n in artificial intelligen­ce, big data and blockchain technologi­es to jointly build Asia into a new power of IPR protection and developmen­t.

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