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Jake's View | To see the fallacy of Trump’s intellectual rights charge, shall we all pay China for the use of paper?

Intellectual property protection does more to inhibit creativity than to promote it. We reward people to stop other people from making use of ideas that are really attributable to all of society.

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Why you can trust SCMP
Ablimit checks a piece of sun-dried mulberry-bark paper in Moyu County of Hotan City, in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region on November 4, 2016. The handmade mulberry-bark paper, originating thousands of years ago in Xinjiang, has been listed as intangible cultural heritage by the Unesco. Photo: Xinhua/Wei Hai

“The United States will no longer turn a blind eye to unfair economic practices including massive intellectual property theft ...”

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US President Donald Trump

-- SCMP, January 28

His list was longer, of course, of all the practices to which the US turns a blind eye or deems fair when practised by the US.

But I shall restrict myself here to his complaint about intellectual property theft and to China, as China is obviously the culprit he had in mind.

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First, some perspective. The figures show that intellectual property royalties paid by China to foreign entities currently run at about US$27.4 billion a year, a tenfold increase over the last 15 years.

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