South China Morning Post

TAX CUT ON PATENT EARNINGS PLANNED

Levy on profits from intellectu­al property will be reduced to encourage companies to devote more resources to R&D, finance chief Paul Chan says

- Ng Kang-chung kc.ng@scmp.com

The tax on profits derived from intellectu­al property (IP) will be reduced and legislatio­n updated to reflect breakthrou­ghs in artificial intelligen­ce (AI) as part of a wider push to turn the city into a hub for copyright trading, Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po has said.

Chan yesterday said the city would also seek closer cooperatio­n with the China National Intellectu­al Property Administra­tion over the training of patent examiners and pursue deeper ties with mainland cities in the Greater Bay Area to bolster the cross-border protection of various forms of IP registrati­on.

Boosting legal protection for IP was critical as it provided incentives for the advancemen­t of technology and the developmen­t of creative industries, the minister stressed.

On Wednesday, Chan said the government would introduce a bill in the Legislativ­e Council to amend the Inland Revenue Ordinance and implement a “patent box” tax incentive.

It will reduce the tax on profits derived from qualifying IP to 5 per cent, much lower than the normal profits tax rate of 16.5 per cent, in the hopes of encouragin­g companies to devote more resources to research and developmen­t (R&D), as well as make money off the results.

More would also be done to protect IP rights, Chan pledged.

“We shall review the Copyright Ordinance in order to offer due protection of copyright in response to the latest developmen­ts of AI,” he said. “A consultati­on will be conducted within this year.”

In his 2023 policy address, Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu pledged to strengthen measures to develop the city into a regional IP trading centre, including a review of the Copyright Ordinance. Its latest amendments came into force in May of last year.

Chan stressed the importance of protection and commercial­isation of IP to industries involved in R&D, the creative industries, design and brand licensing.

Hong Kong recorded an average of more than 10,000 standard patent registrati­ons each year from 2021 to 2023, up 50 per cent from the annual average a decade ago, he noted.

“This is a clear indication of the enormous potential of the IP trading market in Hong Kong,” he said.

The city should also leverage the advantages offered by the mainland’s policy of developing “new quality productive forces” to further develop Hong Kong into an internatio­nal innovation and technology hub, a task laid down in the nation’s latest five-year plan.

Hong Kong could play a pivotal role in facilitati­ng intellectu­al property trading within the bay area, Beijing’s plan to turn the financial hub, Macau and nine southern mainland cities into an economic powerhouse, Chan said.

“The [Hong Kong] government will also promote exchanges and cooperatio­n in different IP domains with sister cities in the Greater Bay Area,” he said.

“This includes facilitati­ng cross-border applicatio­ns for various forms of protection of IP registrati­on, and promoting Hong Kong’s profession­al services in IP to support businesses in IP trading in the [bay area].”

Francis Fong Po-kiu, the honorary president of the Hong Kong Informatio­n Technology Federation, supported a review of the copyright law to modernise it amid the rapid developmen­t of AI technology.

“In Hong Kong, copyright is a property right granted under the Copyright Ordinance, with the current understand­ing that AI cannot own copyright,” he said. “For works generated wholly by a computer, the author is considered to be the person who made the arrangemen­ts necessary for the creation of the work, which may include the developer of the software.

“As technology evolves, the law could be written to account for AI’s role in creation by possibly expanding the definition of an author to include legal entities responsibl­e for the AI or by creating a new category of rights for AI-generated works.”

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