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Chinese authority Dr. Kerry Brown on China’s issues and western ways

VentureOutsource.com: What are your thoughts on foreign electronics OEM companies partnering with Chinese firms and, having the OEM’s product(s) reverse-engineered, then being mass-produced by a Chinese firm (for the Chinese market) under a different brand name? What two (2) changes would you like to see in the way Chinese law addresses intellectual property (IP) infringements?

Brown: Of course, one thing the nation of China is hungriest for, and has been hungry for for many years, is intellectual property and know-how.

China depleted its human capital during the late Maoist period from 1966 onward, and the Cultural Revolution, and has set itself back many years by this intense period of isolationism and anti-intellectualism.

As a result, in 1978, China’s development began from a low starting point, and much of the imperative behind its initial moves to develop investment in China was not so much the capital itself, as it was for the ‘know how’ such investments gave access to.

I think, today, the Chinese are disappointed with their results.

The bottom line is that as of 2006, 88% of China’s high technology exports are made by foreign invested enterprises. Chinese indigenous companies are very weak performers, and simply haven’t progressed very far up the value chain.

This is the driving force behind very weak intellectual property protection in China. The central government may issue very clear and good legislation, but, in fact, in many provinces it is simply disregarded.

Reverse engineering of goods is common, with ‘Chinese brands’ used to service China’s domestic, or internal, market. One business person I know in Beijing who worked for a multinational company there simply says that the moment a product is sold to one person in China control is handed over to the unknown, with the likelihood the product will be copied.

As China-based British businessman, Tim Clissold, writes in Mr. China: A Memoir, his account of doing business in China in the 1990s, he opines about competitors blatantly setting up copy-cat factories, producing the same goods, right next to the foreign enterprises.

Sorting this out is a major challenge. First, the Chinese government needs to get much tougher on implementing its own laws. China has good patent protection on its statues, and in theory, firm measures in place to punish violators who contravene.
 

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But something is still wrong.

China is the source of 70% of the world’s counterfeit goods, running from technical equipment to consumer goods. America took issue with China in front of the World Trade Organization (WTO) in early 2007 because the U.S. experienced China’s generally relaxed approach to copyright infringers.

At the moment the problem seems endemic.

Only a small percentage of those involved in IP theft in China are caught, and few infringers are punished. In addition to tougher implementation, China needs to create a culture in which there is a greater respect for IP.

This is a much tougher task and it must come from the very top Chinese officials, and business people, who must realize that IP violation hurts Chinese companies as much as foreign organizations, and that it is in everyone’s interests to reinforce this.

Being seen as a global IP infringer is also damaging to China’s global image, and its credibility, and this is something that matters to the business and political elite in China.

 

VentureOutsource.com: What characteristics, specific to the Chinese mindset, do you see causing, or influencing, some Chinese companies to feel they are entitled to steal another company’s IP? What are your thoughts on Chinese innovation?

Brown: China aspires to be a knowledge-based economy. However, at the moment, the nation’s fundamental economic model is still very much based on:

  • importing partly finished goods (which account for roughly 30 % of its imported goods)
  • ‘processing’ such goods with the plentiful and cheap Chinese labor (although this has been drying up in recent years as more manufacturing moves to China)
  • followed by re-exporting the finished goods to developed markets such as the EU (China’s largest trade partner), Japan and the U.S.

 

The Chinese very much want to climb up the value chain. This is the nation’s aspiration contained in the government-issued `Five Year Guideline’ that runs from 2006 to 2010. They want to emulate the United States and the EU, with a greater number of knowledge workers, higher numbers of skilled workers, and a shift away from the energy-inefficient and environmentally-destructive manufacturing they have been practicing for the last three decades.

This is a difficult mountain to climb. China needs as much help as they can get. Much of China’s foreign investment in the 1980s and 1990s, particularly from Japan, was to gain knowledge and management expertise.

China now needs to move faster, and expand more intelligently. Companies are putting more effort into research and development (Chinese telecom giants Huawei and ZTE are leading the way), with 10% of profits going back into R&D). But, as the work of Peter Nolan, Sinyu Professor of Chinese Management at Cambridge University, has made clear, the expenditure of Chinese companies in R&D has been much lower than that of western counterparts.

Chinese state and non state companies work on very narrow margins, and have simply not had the latitude to develop in this area. More fundamentally, there is a clear mindset in China that the West, since the end of the Qing period from 1840 onward, bullied and used China, robbing it of much of its power and pride. This is the narrative taught in school text books.

Humiliation was a constant theme for the Chinese during the Qing Dynasty. China refers to a period leading up to the founding of the People’s Republic in 1949 as `The Century of Humiliation’.
 

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China views itself, with some good reasons, as being one of the world’s leaders in scientific knowledge and development, up to the 17th and 18th centuries. This has been well documented in the late, great sinologist Joseph Needham’s `Science and Civilization in China’, which shows that China was instrumental in inventing gunpowder, the printing press, water clocks, and a range of other fundamental innovations.

Chinese now feel that in many ways the West almost owes them technology because of this past, and that using IP in the way that many do in China, is simply fair game. As China develops, this mindset is changing, yet still lingers.

There is a bright spot. China produces more mathematicians and engineers than the rest of the world put together each year.

Many of China’s leading politicians are engineers, or geologists, people with strong scientific background. As a result, China is placing huge importance on its scientific development, and is developing stronger innovation capabilities. As China continues to develop, it is likely to grow significantly in this area, though there are key questions about how a one-party state, with limits on freedom of expression and political control, as China clearly is at the moment, can really become a fully innovative culture.

Such questions will be answered in the years to come. The best outcome is that China then becomes a key technical partner, helping to tackle some of the huge problems of environmental technology and energy efficiency in the years ahead.

 

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