Patents and economic development in South Africa: managing intellectual property rights

Intellectual property rights systems are important policy instruments in the armoury of governments. They have the potential to have favourable or adverse consequences for the relevant national system of innovation, technology transfer, research and development and, eventually, economic growth. Whilst there is a debate related to optimisation of patent systems in the developed world, there is limited debate related to the approaches used in developing countries like South Africa. This article presents an effort to assess whether the South African non-examining patent system makes a contribution or if it is detrimental to the country's development. We found that the current intellectual property rights regime not only fails to support the objectives of the national innovation system but also that it facilitates exploitation by foreign interests and creates substantial social costs. Policy recommendations are provided.

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Main Authors: Pouris,Anthipi, Pouris,Anastassios
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Academy of Science of South Africa 2011
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0038-23532011000600008
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spelling oai:scielo:S0038-235320110006000082012-03-21Patents and economic development in South Africa: managing intellectual property rightsPouris,AnthipiPouris,AnastassiosIntellectual property rights systems are important policy instruments in the armoury of governments. They have the potential to have favourable or adverse consequences for the relevant national system of innovation, technology transfer, research and development and, eventually, economic growth. Whilst there is a debate related to optimisation of patent systems in the developed world, there is limited debate related to the approaches used in developing countries like South Africa. This article presents an effort to assess whether the South African non-examining patent system makes a contribution or if it is detrimental to the country's development. We found that the current intellectual property rights regime not only fails to support the objectives of the national innovation system but also that it facilitates exploitation by foreign interests and creates substantial social costs. Policy recommendations are provided.Academy of Science of South AfricaSouth African Journal of Science v.107 n.11-12 20112011-01-01journal articletext/htmlhttp://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0038-23532011000600008en
institution SCIELO
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country Sudáfrica
countrycode ZA
component Revista
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databasecode rev-scielo-za
tag revista
region África del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Pouris,Anthipi
Pouris,Anastassios
spellingShingle Pouris,Anthipi
Pouris,Anastassios
Patents and economic development in South Africa: managing intellectual property rights
author_facet Pouris,Anthipi
Pouris,Anastassios
author_sort Pouris,Anthipi
title Patents and economic development in South Africa: managing intellectual property rights
title_short Patents and economic development in South Africa: managing intellectual property rights
title_full Patents and economic development in South Africa: managing intellectual property rights
title_fullStr Patents and economic development in South Africa: managing intellectual property rights
title_full_unstemmed Patents and economic development in South Africa: managing intellectual property rights
title_sort patents and economic development in south africa: managing intellectual property rights
description Intellectual property rights systems are important policy instruments in the armoury of governments. They have the potential to have favourable or adverse consequences for the relevant national system of innovation, technology transfer, research and development and, eventually, economic growth. Whilst there is a debate related to optimisation of patent systems in the developed world, there is limited debate related to the approaches used in developing countries like South Africa. This article presents an effort to assess whether the South African non-examining patent system makes a contribution or if it is detrimental to the country's development. We found that the current intellectual property rights regime not only fails to support the objectives of the national innovation system but also that it facilitates exploitation by foreign interests and creates substantial social costs. Policy recommendations are provided.
publisher Academy of Science of South Africa
publishDate 2011
url http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0038-23532011000600008
work_keys_str_mv AT pourisanthipi patentsandeconomicdevelopmentinsouthafricamanagingintellectualpropertyrights
AT pourisanastassios patentsandeconomicdevelopmentinsouthafricamanagingintellectualpropertyrights
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