China surpassed the United States in 2019 as the top source of international patent applications filed with WIPO, the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) said on Tuesday in a statement.
With 58,990 applications filed in 2019 via WIPO's Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) System, China overtook the U.S., which filed 57,840 applications the same year, as the biggest user of the PCT System, a position previously held by the U.S. each year since the PCT began operations in 1978, according to WIPO.
In 1999, WIPO received 276 applications from China. By 2019, that number rose to 58,990, which was a 200-fold increase in only 20 years, said WIPO Director General Francis Gurry.
In 2019, the top five users of the PCT were China, the U.S., Japan, Germany and South Korea. For the third consecutive year, China-based telecom giant Huawei, with 4,411 published PCT applications, was the top corporate filer in 2019.
It was followed by Mitsubishi Electric Corp. of Japan, Samsung Electronics of South Korea, Qualcomm Inc. of the U.S. and Guangdong Oppo Mobile Telecommunications of China.
The top 10 applicant list comprises four companies from China, two from South Korea, and one each from Germany, Japan, Sweden and the U.S.
Among educational institutions, the University of California maintained its top rank with 470 published applications in 2019. China's Tsinghua University ranked second with 265 applications, followed by Shenzhen University from China, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and South China University of Technology.
"China's rapid growth to become the top filer of international patent applications via WIPO underlines a long-term shift in the locus of innovation towards the East, with Asia-based applicants now accounting for more than half of all PCT applications," Gurry said.
While "IP is increasingly at the heart of global competition," it is important to remember that "innovation is not a zero-sum game," he added.
"A net increase in global innovation means new drugs, communications technologies, solutions for global challenges that benefit everyone, wherever they live."