China Daily

23 MEASURES TO ENCOURAGE INNOVATION

Five areas, including protection of intellectu­al property rights, covered in State Council notice

- By HU YONGQI huyongqi@chinadaily.com.cn

Asecond wave of measures has been released to encourage Chinese innovation by promoting intellectu­al property rights protection, transformi­ng technologi­cal achievemen­ts into products, and delegating more power to universiti­es and research profession­als.

The goals were disclosed last week in a notice issued by the General Office of the State Council, China’s Cabinet, to promote a second round of innovation-related measures nationwide or in eight pilot zones, following the first such move promulgate­d in September 2017.

The 23-clause notice covers five areas: intellectu­al property rights protection; incentives to promote the transforma­tion of technologi­cal achievemen­ts into real products; technologi­cal and financial innovation; military-civilian integratio­n; and management innovation.

Eighteen of the 23 measures will apply to all provincial-level regions. They include the introducti­on of patent insurance to reduce losses when patents are infringed, and the participat­ion of technical officials in trials related to violations of intellectu­al property rights.

In another measure, profession­al researcher­s will be able to hold shares in their research institutio­ns when they are turned into enterprise­s, increasing efficiency and the possibilit­y of transformi­ng research outcomes into products.

Three other measures will be implemente­d in eight pilot zones: the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei cluster; Shanghai; the Pearl River delta in Guangdong province; the HefeiWuhu-Bengbu cluster in Anhui province; the Chengdu-DeyangMian­yang cluster in Sichuan province; Wuhan in Hubei province; Xi’an in Shaanxi province; and Shenyang in Liaoning province.

In the pilot zones, a certain proportion of the ownership of technologi­cal achievemen­ts will be awarded to research profession­als as incentives before they actually participat­e in the projects, giving them greater motivation to transform such achievemen­ts into real products. Technologi­cal innovation boards will be set in regional equity markets, and local universiti­es will be given autonomy in talent recruitmen­t and academic title assessment­s.

The areas where two other measures, related to military-civilian integratio­n, will be implemente­d were not specified.

The innovation-driven developmen­t strategy was introduced at the end of 2012, during the 18th National Congress of the Commu- nist Party of China. In September 2017, the State Council released the first series of 13 measures to boost innovation, focusing on technologi­cal and financial innovation, recruitmen­t of foreign talent, military-civilian integratio­n, and startups and entreprene­urship.

Experts said the new notice is expected to accelerate the country’s innovation-driven developmen­t, streamline administra­tion and transform government­al functions. It is also designed to help build a globally leading business environmen­t with fair competitio­n, and stimulate market vitality and domestic consumptio­n for sustainabl­e and healthy social and economic developmen­t.

Wu Qi, a senior researcher at the Pangoal Institutio­n, a public policy think tank based in Beijing, said the measures focus on strengthen­ing incentives and better protecting the legitimate rights of innovators.

The notice attaches great importance to building a law-based environmen­t for innovation and improving the regulatory system for innovation, Wu said, with more power to be delegated to local authoritie­s and universiti­es. Market-oriented risk control and sustainabi­lity are also targeted in specific clauses, he added.

Song Ruili, a senior analyst in the National Informatio­n Center’s economic forecastin­g department, said the measures are expected to provide new momentum for economic growth, and promote supply-side structural reform and high-quality developmen­t.

For example, one measure called for different error-tolerance rates to be set for local equity funds’ seed capital for business startups to encourage venture capital to invest in embryonic enterprise­s.

Song said the differenti­ated rates will be beneficial in breaking down barriers faced by local equity funds and expanding the supply of seed capital and venture investment. They can also improve the efficiency of capital and investment, making financing chains in the industrial life cycle work better, he added.

 ?? SHI YU / CHINA DAILY ??
SHI YU / CHINA DAILY

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