Published

February 07, 2019

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India – The U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s Global Innovation Policy Center (GIPC) today released its seventh annual International Intellectual Property (IP) Index, “Inspiring Tomorrow,” which analyzes the IP climate in 50 world economies. The report ranks economies based on 45 unique indicators that are critical to an innovation-led economy supported by robust patent, trademark, copyright, and trade secrets protection.

The seventh edition of the Index shows India’s jumping eight places in the rankings from 44th of 50 economies in 2018 to 36th in 2019. The improvement reflects important reforms implemented by Indian policymakers toward building and sustaining an innovation ecosystem for domestic entrepreneurs and foreign investors alike.

“For the second year in a row, India’s score represents the largest gain of any country measured on the Index, which covers over 90 percent of global gross domestic product,” said Patrick Kilbride, senior vice president of GIPC. “As the world’s fastest growing major economy undertakes steps to improve its innovation ecosystem, it can empower the next generation of Indian innovators, unleash the creation of 21st century content, and transition itself into a true knowledge-based economy. Of course, there remain important issues that require additional, meaningful reforms, and we hope that India will use the Index as a guide as it moves forward. The global economy benefits when India thrives.”
The U.S. Chamber International IP Index provides both an IP report card for the world and a blueprint for policymakers in countries like India, who wish to bolster economic growth and jobs, innovation, and creativity. The Index findings also show that pro-IP policies in India have the potential to transform the Modi administration’s programs such as “Accelerating Growth for New India Innovations,” “Startup India,” and “Digital India” to economic reality. It presents an objective, data-driven view of competitiveness in a global market, based on criteria used by the business community when determining where to invest.

“India’s performance on the Index finely captures the government of India’s incremental, consistent initiatives over time to improve the country’s IP ecosystem, guided by the vision of the 2016 National IP Policy,” added Kilbride. “Rising up eight places in the rankings, India is largely a story of possibility. The increase is a result of specific reforms, including its accession to the WIPO Internet Treaties, the agreement to initiate a Patent Prosecution Highway (PPH) with international offices, a dedicated set of IP incentives for small business, and administrative reforms to address the patent backlog. All of these enhance India’s competitiveness in R&D-intensive industries. If India can surmount the serious challenges that remain, including with regard to patent eligibility and enforcement, it can build a robust innovation-led growth model for other countries to emulate.”

The full Index can be viewed at http://www.uschamber.com/IPIndex.