Please contact Scott Hall at smhall@uschamber.com or 202-463-5817.
Intellectual property (IP) contributes enormously to our national and state economies. Dozens of industries across our economy rely on the adequate enforcement of their patents, trademarks, and copyrights, while consumers use IP to ensure they are purchasing safe, guaranteed products. We believe IP rights are worth protecting, both domestically and abroad. This is why:
IP-intensive industries employ over 45 million Americans, and hundreds of millions of people worldwide.
Jobs in IP-intensive industries are expected to grow faster over the next decade than the national average.
The average worker in an IP-intensive industry earned about 46% more than his counterpart in a non-IP industry.
America’s IP is worth $6.6 trillion, more than the nominal GDP of any other country in the world.
IP-intensive industries account for over 1/3– or 38.2%– of total U.S. GDP.
IP accounts for 52% of all U.S. merchandise exports- which amounts to nearly $842 billion.
The direct and indirect economic impacts of innovation are overwhelming, accounting for more than 40% of U.S. economic growth and employment. counterpart in a non-IP industry.
Strong IP rights help consumers make an educated choice about the safety, reliability, and effectiveness of their purchases.
Enforced IP rights ensure products are authentic, and of the high-quality that consumers recognize and expect.
IP rights foster the confidence and ease of mind that consumers demand and markets rely on.
Nearly all of the hundreds of products on the World Health Organization’s Essential Drug List, which are critical to saving or improving people’s lives around the globe, came from the R&D-intensive pharmaceutical industry that depends on patent protections.
Innovative agricultural companies are creating new products to help farmers produce more and better products for the world’s hungry while reducing the environmental impact of agriculture.
IP-driven discoveries in alternative energy and green technologies will help improve energy security and address climate change.
Risk and occasional failure are the lifeblood of the innovation economy. IP rights incentivize entrepreneurs to keep pushing for new advances in the face of adversity.
IP rights facilitate the free flow of information by sharing the protected know-how critical to the original, patented invention. In turn, this process leads to new innovations and improvements on existing ones.
American’s Founding Fathers so recognized the importance of innovation and ensured that strong IP rights for authors and inventors are protected in the U.S. Constitution, thus making America the world’s entrepreneurial leader— a fact borne out by the overwhelming number of patents, copyrights and trademarks filed by the U.S. annually.