---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: WIPO mailing list <no-re...@wipo.int>
Date: Tue, Nov 15, 2011 at 1:34 PM
Subject: WIPO Report Shows Growing Demand for IP Changes Face of Innovation
To: sme...@lists.wipo.int


   <http://www.wipo.int/> <http://www.wipo.int/>

WIPO Report Shows Growing Demand for IP Changes Face of Innovation

Geneva, November 14, 2011
PR/2011/700

The ** <http://intranet.wipo.int/econ_stat/en/economics/wipr/>*World
Intellectual Property Report 2011- The Changing Face of
Innovation<http://www.wipo.int/econ_stat/en/economics/wipr/>
* – a new WIPO publication – describes how ownership of intellectual
property (IP) rights has become central to the strategies of innovating
firms worldwide. With global demand for patents rising from 800,000
applications in the early 1980s to 1.8 million in 2009, the Report
concludes that growing investments in innovation and the globalization of
economic activities are key drivers of this trend.

As a result, IP policy has moved to the forefront of innovation policy. In
a foreword to the Report, WIPO Director General Francis Gurry notes that
“innovation growth is no longer the prerogative of high-income countries
alone; the technological gap between richer and poorer countries is
narrowing. Incremental and more local forms of innovation contribute to
economic and social development, on a par with world-class technological
innovations.”

The Report points to a number of implications of the growing demand for IP
rights, namely:

   - Knowledge markets based on IP rights are on the rise. Evidence
   suggests that firms trade and license IP rights more frequently.
   Internationally, royalty and licensing fee revenue increased from USD 2.8
   billion in 1970 to USD 27 billion in 1990, and to approximately USD 180
   billion in 2009 – outpacing growth in global GDP. New market intermediaries
   have emerged, such as IP clearinghouses and brokerages.

 Evidence shows that knowledge markets enable firms to specialize, allowing
them to be more innovative and efficient at the same time. In addition,
they allow firms to control which knowledge to guard and which to share so
as to maximize learning – a key element of modern open innovation
strategies.


   - Patenting has grown especially fast for so-called complex technologies
   – that is, technologies consisting of many separately patentable inventions
   where patent ownership is often widespread. This partly reflects
   technological change. For example, complex technologies include most
   information and communications technologies that have seen rapid advances
   over the past decades.

At the same time, some complex technology industries – notably,
telecommunications, software, audiovisual technology, optics and, more
recently, smartphones and tablet computers – have seen firms strategically
build up large patent portfolios. As a result, there is concern that
increasingly dense webs of overlapping patent rights slow cumulative
innovation processes. Collaborative approaches, such as patent pools, can
to some extent address such concerns. However, making sure that crowded
patent landscapes do not hold back innovation and entrepreneurship demands
careful attention by policymakers.

   - In this regard, well-functioning patent institutions have become a
   cornerstone of successful innovation systems. They perform the essential
   tasks of ensuring the quality of patents granted and providing balanced
   dispute resolution. Unprecedented levels of patenting have put these
   institutions under considerable pressure. Many patent offices have seen
   growing backlogs of pending applications. In 2010, the number of
   unprocessed applications worldwide stood at 5.17 million. The choices
   patent offices make can have far-reaching consequences on incentives to
   innovate.
   - Many countries have put in place policies to harness public research
   for innovation. One element of such policies is to incentivize patenting by
   university and public research organizations (PROs) and the subsequent
   commercial development of their inventions. Accordingly, there has been a
   marked increase in patent applications by these organizations. University
   and PRO filings under the WIPO’s Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) have grown
   from close to zero in the 1980s to more than 15,000 in 2010. High-income
   economies account for most of this growth – notably France, Germany, Japan,
   the UK and the US. However, many middle income countries have also seen
   marked growth. In the case of universities, China leads with 2,348 PCT
   filings from 1980 to 2010, followed by Brazil, India and South Africa. In
   the case of PROs, China and India alone represent 78 percent of total
   fillings from middle-income countries.

Policy reforms aimed at promoting patent-based university technology
transfer have multifaceted effects on research institutions, firms, the
science system and the economy.

Other conclusions of the Report include:


   - While high-income countries still dominate global R&D spending, the
   geography of innovation has shifted. Global R&D expenditures almost doubled
   in real terms from 1993 to 2009. Most R&D spending still takes place in
   high-income countries – around 70 percent of the world total. They spend
   around 2.5 percent of their gross domestic product (GDP) on R&D, more than
   double the rate of middle-income economies. Low- and middle-income
   economies have increased their share of global R&D expenditure by 13
   percentage points between 1993 and 2009. China accounts for most of this
   increase – more than 10 percentage points – propelling China to the world’s
   second largest R&D spender in 2009.
   - Data on broader investment in intangible assets are only available for
   selected high income countries. They show that such investment has grown
   rapidly; in a number of countries, firms now invest more in intangible than
   in tangible assets. In Europe, investment in intangibles amount to as much
   as 9.1 percent of GDP in Sweden and the UK.
   - There is clear evidence that innovation is increasingly international
   with a sharp increase in the share of peer-reviewed science and engineering
   articles with international co-authorship and a rising share of patents
   which list inventors from more than one country. In addition, multinational
   firms more and more locate their R&D facilities in a variety of countries –
   with certain middle-income economies seeing particularly fast growth. The
   rising share of middle-income countries in the global economy, in turn, is
   re-orienting innovation towards the demands of those countries.
   - Some evidence exists that innovation has become more collaborative and
   open, but assessing the true scale and importance of new approaches is
   challenging. For one, it is difficult to draw a clear distinction between
   open innovation strategies and long-standing collaborative practices, such
   as joint R&D, joint marketing or strategic partnerships. For another,
   certain elements of open innovation strategies – such as new policies
   internal to firms or informal knowledge exchanges – cannot easily be
   traced.
   - Notwithstanding this uncertainty, collaboration in the innovation
   process can benefit firms and society. Joint IP production occurs through
   R&D alliances, in particular contractual partnerships and equity-based
   joint ventures. Data on such alliances are limited and sometimes difficult
   to interpret, but they suggest that firms in the ICT, biotechnology, and
   chemical industries most frequently enter into such alliances. Society
   usually benefits from such collaboration as it enhances the efficiency and
   effectiveness of the innovation process.

 Through its new *World Intellectual Property Report* series, WIPO seeks to
explain, clarify and contribute to policy analysis relating to IP, with a
view to facilitating evidence-based policymaking. Future reports will focus
on other IP themes.

Link to the Report: http://www.wipo.int/econ_stat/en/economics/wipr/

 Remove or add an email address to this mailing
list.<http://www.wipo.int/lists/subscribe/sme-en>

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Kantakji Group" group.
To post to this group, send email to kantakjigroup@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group لفك الاشتراك من المجموعة أرسل للعنوان التالي 
رسالة فارغة, send email to kantakjigroup+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at
http://groups.google.com/group/kantakjigroup?hl=en
سياسة النشر في المجموعة:
ترك ما عارض أهل السنة والجماعة... الاكتفاء بأمور ذات علاقة بالاقتصاد الإسلامي 
وعلومه ولو بالشيء البسيط، ويستثنى من هذا مايتعلق بالشأن العام على مستوى الأمة 
كحدث غزة مثلا... عدم ذكر ما يتعلق بشخص طبيعي أو اعتباري بعينه باستثناء الأمر 
العام الذي يهم عامة المسلمين... تمرير بعض الأشياء الخفيفة المسلية ضمن قواعد 
الأدب وخاصة منها التي تأتي من أعضاء لا يشاركون عادة، والقصد من ذلك تشجيعهم على 
التفاعل الإيجابي... ترك المديح الشخصي...إن كل المقالات والآراء المنشورة تُعبر 
عن رأي أصحابها، ولا تعبّر عن رأي إدارة المجموعة بالضرورة.

<<banner_en.gif>>

<<greybar_en.gif>>

<<logo_en.gif>>

رد على