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This book evaluates the risks that China's intellectual property
(IP) regime poses to innovation. China's IP regime has been heavily
criticized as potentially stifling innovation. However, the
country's innovation capabilities have risen significantly and
major reforms have recently been made to its IP regime. How risky,
really, is China's IP regime for innovation? This book investigates
this question at different units of analysis based on a
multidisciplinary assessment involving law, management, economics,
and political science. Specifically, it critically appraises
China's substantive IP laws, measures for boosting patent quantity
and quality, measures for transmitting and exploiting technological
knowledge, new experimental IP measures, and China's systems for
administering and enforcing IP. Practitioners and scholars from
various backgrounds can benefit from the up-to-date analysis as
well as the practical managerial tools provided, including risk
assessment matrices for businesses and recommendations for
institutional reform.
This book provides new insights into the economic impacts,
strategic objectives and legal structures of an emerging branch of
government incentives conditioned on meeting intellectual
property-related requirements. Despite becoming more common in
recent years, such incentives - ranging from patent fee subsidies
and patent box tax deductions to inventor remuneration schemes -
are still under-researched. A diverse range of analytical methods,
including econometric analyses, case studies and comparative legal
analysis, are used to study these incentives in countries in Europe
and China. Scholars, policymakers and practitioners can benefit
from the conceptual and practical insights as well as policy
recommendations provided.
This book provides new insights into the economic impacts,
strategic objectives and legal structures of an emerging branch of
government incentives conditioned on meeting intellectual
property-related requirements. Despite becoming more common in
recent years, such incentives - ranging from patent fee subsidies
and patent box tax deductions to inventor remuneration schemes -
are still under-researched. A diverse range of analytical methods,
including econometric analyses, case studies and comparative legal
analysis, are used to study these incentives in countries in Europe
and China. Scholars, policymakers and practitioners can benefit
from the conceptual and practical insights as well as policy
recommendations provided.
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