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Pirates on the High Seas

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American trade is increasingly dependent on high-technology and innovation-intensive goods.

Companies like Microsoft, Merck, Tommy Hilfiger, or Disney represent very different parts of the U.S. industrial base, but they share a reliance on innovation and export and, therefore, an interest in ensuring adequate intellectual property protection for their products worldwide.

Piracy is a scourge because it affects the symbols of American economic strength and greatest hope for the future - modern information-intensive industries.

In the 1980s and early 1990s, the United States formulated an aggressive external intellectual properties rights policy.

Dozens of bilateral agreements were signed with countries to increase the standards of IP protection that U.S. firms encountered abroad. The crown jewel of the American policy was the ratification of the Trade Related Intellectual Property Rights Agreement in the World Trade Organization.

Intellectual property protection, once a purely domestic issue, became a matter of trade policy.

This paper examines the challenges facing the United States as it tries to revitalize its intellectual property rights policy.

The new trade rules created by the WTO and the lassitude - domestic and international - following the last long trade round are impeding the formulation of an effective policy.

Intellectual property disputes, however, continue to surface as new technologies create new challenges and as monitoring and enforcement problems recede even further behind borders.

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Product Details
Brookings Institution,U.S.
0876092067 / 9780876092064
Book
01/02/1998
United States
100 pages
169 x 219 mm, 125 grams
General (US: Trade) Learn More