Companies lack of know-how about patents and the nation's weak grasp of
intellectual property rights (IPR), are holding China back, a senior official
said yesterday.
Lu Yongxiang, vice-chairman of the Standing Committee of National People's
Congress (NPC), warned that a lack of experience in patent applications was
restraining China's ambition of becoming an "innovative country."
Between 1998 and 2003, 99 per cent of Chinese companies did not apply for a
single patent, said Lu.
Even the country's 166 biggest companies, only applied for an average of 226
each less than 20 per cent of the applications made by their foreign
counterparts, he added.
His remarks came as he reported the review of the implementation of the
Patent Law to NPC Standing Committee members in Beijing. The law was passed in
1984 and has been revised twice in the past two decades.
Many high-tech invention patents are applied for by foreign companies,
especially in wireless transmission, mobile telecommunications, semiconductors,
medicines and computers, according to Lu, who is also president of the Chinese
Academy of Sciences.
For example, 91 per cent of mobile telecommunications patents are held
overseas.
The result is that Chinese enterprises have to pay high fees for using these
core technologies, sometimes as much as 40 per cent of the total price of the
product, according to Lu.
Since China's accession to the World Trade Organization in 2001, Chinese
enterprises have paid over US$1 billion in economic compensation due to IPR
disputes with foreign companies, said Lu.
Another patent-related problem is that many Chinese inventions come from
universities or research institutes, which have little access to market
development.
Many patents are only academic-oriented and could not be developed into
market products, according to Lu.
He urged Chinese companies to devote more investment to technological
innovation, and governments and people's courts at all levels to improve IPR
protection work.
Lu added that the NPC Standing Committee plans to revise the Patent Law to
better adapt it to the current situation in China.
Returned Chinese need help
Also at yesterday's meeting NPC Standing Committee members received an update
on an investigation into the situation of returned overseas Chinese.
In April the committee instructed three teams of researchers to examine the
implementation of the Law on Protecting Rights of Returned Overseas Chinese,
which was introduced in 1990.
Sheng Huaren, vice-chairman of the NPC Standing Committee, yesterday reported
the investigation results, urging governments at all levels to pay attention to
the plight of returned overseas Chinese.
Starting in the 1950s, floods of overseas Chinese came back to the nation,
many of them being accommodated on special farms.
But due to the poor management of many of the farms, over 1.17 million
returned overseas Chinese are now living in poverty.
Sheng said both the State Council and local governments should strive to
improve the situation.
(China Daily 06/29/2006 page2)