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Guangdong vows to encourage self-innovation By Zhan Lisheng (China Daily) Updated: 2006-02-28 05:44
GUANGZHOU: South China's Guangdong Province is vowing to create a social
environment encouraging and protecting independent innovation.
Huang Huahua, governor of Guangdong, reiterated the importance of independent
innovation on several occasions at this year's session of the provincial
people's congress, which concluded yesterday.
"The province will improve policies to encourage and support self-innovation
initiatives and help the cities of Guangzhou and Shenzhen turn into innovation
pilot cities of the nation this year," he said when he addressed the opening of
the congress last week.
And the province will redouble efforts to improve the system for
technological innovations while improving measures to protect intellectual
property rights (IPR), he added.
Experts said companies themselves had to take more responsibility as well.
Wang Shouren, a professor and secretary of the Shenzhen Venture Capital
Association, said: "Innovation is by no means empty talk. It requires the
endeavours of domestic enterprises to carry it out, as well as the efforts of
the government to create a good environment ranging from policies and service
systems, to IPR protection for self-innovation."
Wang spoke highly of such attempts as the first ever international expo and
forum for Chinese enterprises start-up fund-raising, which will make its debut
in Guangzhou from May 12-14, deeming the event timely and constructive with the
whole nation striving to develop an innovation-oriented economy.
The event would set up a good platform for those who have money to match
those who have innovative R&D fruits, he said.
The professor's views are strongly echoed by Mou Yongxin, managing director
of Guangzhou Xiangxue Pharmaceutical Co Ltd, a private pharmaceutical company
famous for its innovativeness.
"Innovation hinges heavily on R&D work, which entails major capital
input," Mou said. "The problem of capital will be particularly bothersome to a
high-tech start-up."
The managing director also expects the government to improve the public
service system, by creating more public R&D platforms and public
laboratories.
And he considered it very important for the government to reinforce IPR
protection.
"Without enough IPR protection, very few enterprises, if not none, will
choose to be innovative."
Fair play urged
However, a CEO of a local software company, who asked not to be identified,
urged "fair play" in the domestic market, saying that many governmental
departments and State-owned enterprises prefer foreign brands to domestic ones
as far as high-tech products are concerned, leaving domestic high-tech companies
in a very unfavourable position to survive and develop in.
In a recent interview, Professor Yang Yonghua, director of South China Normal
University's national economy research institute, said that self-innovation will
be a breakthrough for the upgrade of the economy in Guangdong and a possible
solution to the problem of energy shortages in the province.
Yang said that the province should also make greater efforts to cultivate and
secure high-calibre scientific and technological professionals and expand the
scale of higher education, basing his idea on the fact that innovation needs an
ample supply of well-educated professionals.
Li Xinghua, deputy director-general of the provincial science and technology
department, said the province aims to develop into a regional international
scientific and technological innovation centre by 2020.
(China Daily 02/28/2006 page3)
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