The Oklahoman

UN: COVID didn’t stop innovation

WIPO notes challenges ahead, says change needed

- Jamey Keaten |

“What COVID has done is that it has disrupted certain industries, but it has accelerate­d certain industries. It comes as no surprise that communicat­ions, hardware, software, ICT, these are sectors (that) have done well” Daren Tang WIPO director general

GENEVA ward last – year The despite U.N.’s intellectu­al the impact property of the coronaviru­s agency said outbreak. Monday Technology, that innovation pharmaceut­icals marched forand biotech industries boosted their investment­s, even as hard-hit sectors like transport and travel eased back on spending. h The World Intellectu­al Property Organizati­on, which helps coordinate and approve internatio­nal patents, trademarks and other intellectu­al property, also warned that change in the overall “innovation landscape” was happening too slowly, saying a broader array of countries should benefit from it as the world rebuilds after the pandemic ebbs.

The findings released Monday emerged from WI

PO’s latest innovation index report for 2020, which ranked Switzerlan­d, Sweden, the United States,

Britain and fast-climber South Korea – driven partly from creativity like K-Pop music – as the most innovative economies. China and France edged up in the rankings, which continue to be dominated by

Asia, Europe and North America.

“Innovation is resilient – and even more resilient than we expected,” said WIPO Director General Daren Tang.

“What COVID has done is that it has disrupted certain industries, but it has accelerate­d certain industries,” Tang said in an interview in his office overlookin­g Lake Geneva. “It comes as no surprise that communicat­ions, hardware, software, ICT, these are sectors (that) have done well” as well as the medical and biotech sectors.

The index ranks 132 countries, plus economies such as Hong Kong, and comes a year after WIPO said investment­s in innovation hit a record high in 2019 – an annualized rate of gain of 8.5%.

Top technology companies like Apple, Microsoft and Huawei increased investment on average about 10% last year, and venture capital investment surged – a trend that is continuing this year, WIPO said.

While the United States and China have largely driven the rise in research and developmen­t in recent years, other countries like Turkey, Vietnam, India and the Philippine­s – the so-called TVIP countries – have been rising consistent­ly in the rankings over the past five years. Switzerlan­d has consistent­ly led the rankings for the past five years.

Overall, the WIPO report on the index said, “the global innovation landscape is changing too slowly. ... There is urgent need for this to change.”

 ?? AHN YOUNG-JOONAP ?? South Korea was one of the top countries in latest innovation index report from the World Intellectu­al Property Organizati­on.
AHN YOUNG-JOONAP South Korea was one of the top countries in latest innovation index report from the World Intellectu­al Property Organizati­on.

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