organization:world intellectual property organisation

  • A new hegemon

    The Chinese century is well under way
    Many trends that appear global are in fact mostly Chinese

    Print edition | Graphic detail
    Oct 27th 2018

    Get the data here : https://github.com/TheEconomist/graphic-detail-data/tree/master/data/2018-10-27_chinese-century/README_files/figure-markdown_github

    When scholars of international relations predict that the 2000s will be a “Chinese century”, they are not being premature. Although America remains the lone superpower, China has already replaced it as the driver of global change.

    There is one economic metric on which China already ranks first. Measured at market exchange rates, China’s gdp is still 40% smaller than America’s. However, on a purchasing-power-parity (ppp) basis, which adjusts currencies so that a basket of goods and services is worth the same amount in different countries, the Chinese economy became the world’s largest in 2013. Although China is often grouped with other “emerging markets”, its performance is unique: its gdp per person at ppp has risen tenfold since 1990. In general, poorer economies grow faster than rich ones, because it is easier to “catch up” when starting from a low base. Yet in other countries that were as poor as China was in 1990, purchasing power has merely doubled.

    China’s record has exerted a “gravitational pull” on the world’s economic output. The Economist has calculated a geographic centre of the global economy by taking an average of each country’s latitude and longitude, weighted by their gdp. At the height of America’s dominance, this point sat in the north Atlantic. But China has tugged it so far east that the global centre of economic gravity is now in Siberia.

    Because China is so populous and is developing so quickly, it is responsible for a remarkable share of global change. Since the start of the financial crisis in 2008, for example, China has accounted for 45% of the gain in world gdp. In 1990 some 750m Chinese people lived in extreme poverty; today fewer than 10m do. That represents two-thirds of the world’s decline in poverty during that time. China is also responsible for half of the total increase in patent applications over the same period.

    For all its talk of a “peaceful rise”, China has steadily beefed up its military investment—even as the rest of the world cut back after the end of the cold war. As a result, the People’s Liberation Army accounts for over 60% of the total increase in global defence spending since 1990. And all of this growth has come at a considerable cost to the environment: China is also the source of 55% of the increase in the world’s carbon emissions since 1990.

    Sources: Economist Intelligence Unit; Global Carbon Project; Maddison Project Database; SIPRI; World Bank; World Intellectual Property Organisation; The Economist

    #chine #économie

  • India to seek photocopy right for students

    http://www.telegraphindia.com/1130921/jsp/nation/story_17374550.jsp

    Initiative très intéressante en Inde :

    India will seek changes to international copyright regulations so that
    students and researchers can procure photocopies of expensive books without having to pay royalties, a senior government source said.

    BASANT KUMAR MOHANTY

    New Delhi, Sept. 20: India will seek changes to international copyright regulations so that students and researchers can procure photocopies of expensive books without having to pay royalties, a senior government source said.

    Come December, he said, the Union human resource development ministry will ask the World Intellectual Property Organisation (Wipo) to relax its norms that protect authors’ and publishers’ commercial rights over their books.

    The ministry will suggest at the next general assembly of Wipo, a UN body with 185 nations as members, that educational and research institutions be exempted from the copyright regime.

    “Students and researchers use material (from books) for academic purposes. In developing countries like ours, they should not face any restrictions in doing so,” the source said.

    The ministry plan comes at a time the Oxford University Press, Cambridge University Press and Taylor & Francis have moved Delhi High Court alleging illegal photocopying of their books by a private vendor operating from the Delhi University campus.

    #inde #copyright #photocopie #droit_d_auteur

    • Un commentaire de Simon Batterbury de l’université de Melbourne :

      Nonetheless, copyright is pretty much impossible to enforce ever since the internet started working properly in the 1990s. Great in principle to benefit the writer or owner, but in reality things escape paywalls all the time.

      We are deluding ourselves if we think written texts will somehow take a different path to music downloads. I have never downloaded any music or films, but I am told this is pretty much the norm these days.

      The major academic publishers are putting up fierce resistance where they retain copyright to articles, but in a few hours all current geography articles from this month could be uploaded to an offshore domain, circulated to several others, and replicated as they are chased down. Individual copyrighted material the same. Only a new form of file, that self-destructs on an illegal download, is time limited or something, would halt this.

      The open access movement (which is about allowing material to be read by anybody, essentially) may be distasteful to some because to the potential for upfront charges to writers, but it actually fits with how the world now works. And with the needs of cash-poor Indian students and their universities too.

    • Les défenseurs du copyright aujourd’hui mettent toujours en avant le droit des auteurs à être rémunérés mais omettent de mentionner que dans l’immense majorité des cas, les auteurs ne perçoivent qu’une très faible, voire aucune rémunération. Ce sont des éditeurs qui encaissent et qui promeuvent la défense du droit « d’auteur » et son extension non seulement ad vitam mais aeternam (pour l’instant 70 ans après la mort des auteurs).