China maps out blueprint for building up IP strength in new era

By Shen Changyu, Director of China National Intellectual Property Administration

 

China recently issued a guideline on building up its intellectual property (IP) strength between 2021 and 2035, which charts the route to advancing the development of intellectual property rights (IPR) in the next 15 years and represents a milestone in the country’s IPR sector.

 

In recent years, China’s IPR sector has made steady progress, blazing a path of IPR development with Chinese characteristics.

 

Jumping to the 12th this year from the 35th in 2013 in the world’s innovation index ranking, China is the highest-ranked among middle-income economies and one of the fastest growing countries in the world in terms of innovation capability, according to the Global Innovation Index 2021 released recently by the World Intellectual Property Organization.

 

The country has truly become a big country in IP and is well prepared for growing into an IPR powerhouse.

 

By 2025, China will see significant results in enhancing its strength in IPR development, including stricter IPR protection, a high level of social satisfaction, greater market value of IPR, and significant improvement in the competitiveness of domestic brands, according to the guideline issued by the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the State Council.

 

China’s overall IPR competitiveness will be at the forefront of the world by 2035, when the country will basically become a world-class IPR power with Chinese characteristics.

 

The guideline also specified China’s major tasks in six aspects for building up its IP strength, which are also key areas and links in developing the country into an IPR powerhouse.

 

First, China will build an IP system oriented to socialist modernization. In particular, it will establish a comprehensive, well-structured, IP legal system featuring internal and external coordination, and accelerate IP legislation in new fields and business forms such as big data, AI and genetic technology.

 

The country will also set up a management system featuring unified responsibilities, scientific standards and excellent services, and strengthen the central government’s power in the macro-management, regional coordination, and overall planning of foreign-related matters concerning IPR protection.

 

Besides, it plans to form a fair, reasonable and scientific IP policy system and an IP rule system for emerging and specific fields characterized by timely response and sound protection.

 

Second, China intends to build an IPR protection system that can sustain a world-class business environment. For the purpose, it will establish a fair, efficient, and complete judicial protection system that features scientific approach and clear responsibilities, a convenient and efficient administrative protection system that is strict, fair, open and transparent, as well as a collaborative protection pattern featuring unified leadership, smooth connection, and fast and effective response.

 

Meanwhile, it will implement a project for the construction of the IPR protection system and facilitate the channel of collaboration between administrative and judicial protection.

 

Third, China will establish an IPR market operation mechanism that encourages innovation. It aims to improve a market-oriented high-quality innovation system with enterprises as the mainstay, and perfect an efficient and sound IPR application mechanism that can fully realize the market value of IPR, under which the country will strengthen the cultivation of patent-intensive industries and promote the construction of trademarks and brands.

 

The country also plans to establish a standardized, orderly and dynamic market-oriented operation mechanism and implement a project for the construction of the IPR operation mechanism.

 

Fourth, the country will build an IPR public service system that is convenient and beneficial to the public. It will also strengthen the supply of comprehensive, standardized, intelligent and efficient public services, implement a project for the construction of intelligent IPR public services, advance the standardization, normalization, and network construction of public services, and form an information service model featuring standardized data, resource integration, and efficient utilization.

 

Fifth, China will foster a cultural and social environment that helps promote high-quality IPR development. It will strive to create a cultural atmosphere of respecting knowledge, valuing innovation, upholding integrity and observance of the law, and encouraging fair competition, establish a cultural communication matrix featuring novel content, diverse forms, and integrated development for IPR development, and cultivate a more open, active and dynamic environment for the development of IP talents while strengthening the training of IP talents with a global vision.

 

Sixth, China will further deepen its participation in global IPR governance, for which the country will actively participate in the reform and construction of the global IPR governance system and expand opening-up in the field, build an international cooperation network that coordinates multilateral and bilateral platforms, actively safeguard and develop multilateral systems for IPR cooperation, deepen pragmatic cooperation with countries and regions participating in the Belt and Road Initiative on IPR, and create high-level cooperation platforms.