Chinaʼs Indigenous Innovation Policies and the World Trade Organization
Summary. China's Indigenous Innovation Policies incentivize government procurement of products containing Chinese-owned technology and intellectual property. U.S. companies argue these policies discriminate against foreign firms and force technology transfer as a condition of market access. This article examines whether China's government procurement policies violate World Trade Organization obligations and concludes that China operates within its legal rights under international trade law.
Cite this article
Chow, D. C. K.. (2013). Chinaʼs Indigenous Innovation Policies and the World Trade Organization. https://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/njilb/vol34/iss1/3
Chow, Daniel C. K.. “Chinaʼs Indigenous Innovation Policies and the World Trade Organization.” 2013. https://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/njilb/vol34/iss1/3.
Chow, Daniel C. K.. 2013. “Chinaʼs Indigenous Innovation Policies and the World Trade Organization.” https://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/njilb/vol34/iss1/3.
@article{chow-2013-china-s-indigenous-innovation-policies,
title = {Chinaʼs Indigenous Innovation Policies and the World Trade Organization},
author = {Daniel C. K. Chow},
year = {2013},
url = {https://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/njilb/vol34/iss1/3}
}
TY - JOUR TI - Chinaʼs Indigenous Innovation Policies and the World Trade Organization AU - Daniel C. K. Chow PY - 2013 UR - https://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/njilb/vol34/iss1/3 ER -
Details
- Countries
- China, United States
- Regions
- Asia, North America
- Categories
- policy, indigenous-innovation
- Added
- 2026-04-28