China is world’s principal IP infringer

China is world’s principal IP infringer

The theft of Intellectual Property (IP) remains a grave threat to the United States due to lack of legal enforcement and national industrial policies that encourage IP theft by public, quasi-private, and private entities, according to the latest report by the Commission on the Theft of American Intellectual Property. Counterfeit goods, software piracy and the theft of trade secrets cost the US economy as high as USD 600 billion a year, says a private American watchdog which labeled China as the “world’s principal IP infringer”.

In 2015, the US imported counterfeit and pirated tangible goods valued between USD 58 billion and USD 118 billion, while counterfeit and pirated tangible US goods worth approximately USD 85 billion were sold that year worldwide.

The proliferation of pirated software is believed to be a much larger problem in scope than statistics suggest due to the ease of downloading software, ubiquitous use of software across industries and countries, and inadequate surveys.

The value of software pirated in 2015 alone exceeded USD 52 billion worldwide. American companies were most likely the leading victims, with estimated losses of at least 0.1 per cent of the USD 18 trillion GDP of the US, or approximately USD 18 billion, the report said.

China (including Hong Kong) accounts for 87 per cent of counterfeit goods seized coming into the United States. China continues to obtain American IP from US companies operating inside China, from entities elsewhere in the world, and of course from the US directly through conventional as well as cyber means. These include coercive activities by the state designed to force outright IP, the report said.

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