全球经济中的知识产权保护

Kamal Saggi, Olena Ivus
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引用次数: 5

摘要

世界不同地区对知识产权的保护水平参差不齐的长期国际摩擦在1995年以《与贸易有关的知识产权协定》(TRIPS)的形式达到顶峰。TRIPS是世界贸易组织(WTO)所有成员国都有义务遵守的多边贸易协定。这项具有里程碑意义的协议从一开始就存在争议,因为它要求经济和技术能力截然不同的国家在知识产权方面遵守基本相同的规则和条例,并给予发展中国家和最不发达国家一些临时的回旋余地。正如人们所预料的那样,发展中国家出于哲学和实践的考虑反对该协议,而发达国家,尤其是美国,则强烈支持该协议。多年来,出现了大量丰富的经济学文献,有助于理解这种国际鸿沟。更具体地说,讨论了与全球经济中知识产权保护有关的几个基本问题:知识产权与贸易有关吗?开放经济体的专利保护动机与封闭经济体不同吗?如果不同,原因何在?对国家专利政策进行国际协调的理由是什么?为什么发达国家和发展中国家对知识产权的保护有着如此截然不同的看法?支持和反对《与贸易有关的知识产权协定》要求在世界经济中加强知识产权的主要论点的经验支持程度如何?《与贸易有关的知识产权协定》的核心义务及其所包含的灵活性能否在经济逻辑的基础上得到证明?我们讨论了几十年来严格的理论和实证研究得出的关键结论,并对未来的工作提出了一些建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Protection of Intellectual Property in the Global Economy
Longstanding international frictions over uneven levels of protection granted to intellectual property rights (IPR) in different parts of the world culminated in 1995 in the form of the Agreement on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS)—a multilateral trade agreement that all member countries of the World Trade Organization (WTO) are obligated to follow. This landmark agreement was controversial from the start since it required countries with dramatically different economic and technological capabilities to abide by essentially the same rules and regulations with respect to IPRs, with some temporary leeway granted to developing and least developed countries. As one might expect, developing countries objected to the agreement on philosophical and practical grounds while developed countries, especially the United States, championed it strongly. Over the years, a vast and rich economics literature has emerged that helps understand this international divide. More specifically, several fundamental issues related to the protection of IPRs in the global economy have been addressed: are IPRs trade-related? Do the incentives for patent protection of an open economy differ from those of a closed one and, if so, why? What is the rationale for international coordination over national patent policies? Why do developed and developing countries have such radically different views regarding the protection of IPRs? What is the level of empirical support underlying the major arguments for and against the TRIPS-mandated strengthening of IPRs in the world economy? Can the core obligations of the TRIPS Agreement as well as the flexibilities it contains be justified on the basis of economic logic? We discuss the key conclusions that can be drawn from decades of rigorous theoretical and empirical research and also offer some suggestions for future work.
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