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| China's indigenous/domestic innovation policy. Everyone just move along. |
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| Friday, 15 October 2010 15:11 |
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By Steve Dickinson in 'China Law Blog' There has been much discussion lately about China's domestic innovation/indigenous innovation policy. Foreign Affairs Magazine recently did an article on this entitled, "China's Innovation Wall, setting forth the standard Western view, which is that this policy will be terrible for America. The standard view is wrong.
China's domestic innovation policy is part of a larger program initiated in 2006 designed to make China into a world power innovator in technology. The real issue in China is that this policy has been a dismal failure. There are few signs of any improvement in technological innovation in China. Chinese companies, government and educational institutions seldom innovate; they appropriate and adapt. China remains nearly totally dependent on foreign technology. This bothers the leaders in Beijing, of course, and one response is for them to initiate ill designed policies like the domestic innovation initiative. This policy should be seen for what it is: a desperate attempt by China to force innovation through a top down directive. The fact is that China remains a very good market for foreign technology and this is not likely to change at any time in the near future. Over the last year, my law firm has doubled its legal work related to licensing Western technology to China and in none of those deals would it be fair to say that the Western company "gave away" its technology. The bottom line is that for most company's China's domestic innovation policy can be safely ignored. For more on China's domestic innovation policy, check out the following: "China's Latest Power Plays — More Unfair Trade, Now Grave Threats to Our Security," where Leo Hindery gets all up in arms about it on the Huffington Post. "Indigenous Innovation: Determining "Our" Position," where Scott Kennedy notes China's "consistent pattern of ... issuing unacceptable technology policies and then modifying them in the face of massive public criticism by foreign industry and government and quiet complaints from Chinese businesses with extensive foreign partnerships and pro-liberal Chinese experts." "Report: China forcing foreign automakers to give up EV secrets?" where the Autoblog reports that the Chinese government may be forcing foreign automakers to reveal their electric vehicle technology secrets. "China's Indigenous Innovation Policy and its effect on foreign intellectual property rights holders," where China Law Insight analyzes the impact this policy might have on foreign company IP. What do you think?
Steve Dickinson is one of the attorneys in Harris & Moure law firm, He practices in areas such as International and Domestic Corporate and Commercial Law; International and Domestic Intellectual Property Protection and Technology Licensing Law; China Law; China outsourcing Law; Japan Law. Steve is an ongoing contributor to the ChinaLawBlog.com |
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