On
August 8, 2018, the Property Rights Alliance published the 2018 International
Property Rights Index
(IPRI), ranking 125 countries around the world based on the strength of both
physical and intellectual property rights. The countries included in the 2018
edition comprise over 98% of global gross domestic product (GDP) and over 93%
of the world’s population. Most notably, the IPRI finds that property rights
are a defining factor impacting a country’s investment, entrepreneurship, and
economic activity.
The IPRI
includes three core components (legal and political environment, physical
property rights, and intellectual property rights) and ten corresponding
categories. The legal and political environment component includes judicial
independence, rule of law, political stability, and control of corruption. The
physical property rights component includes the protection of such rights, the
ability to register property, and the ease of access to loans. The intellectual
property (IP) rights component includes the protection and enforcement of such
rights, strength of patent protections, and the level of copyright piracy.
Using data from other international indices, the IPRI compiles scores from each
of these components into a 0-10 scale for each of the 125 countries.
Finland
ranks highest with a score of 8.69, followed by New Zealand and Switzerland
with scores of 8.63 and 8.62, respectively. The United States ranks 14th
with a score of 8.12, which is exactly where it ranked in 2017. But its 2018 score
did improve slightly from 8.07. On the other end of the scale, the bottom three
countries are Venezuela, Yemen, and Haiti, with scores of 2.96, 2.79, and 2.73,
respectively.
Significantly,
the Index provides insight into correlations between IPRI scores and many
economic outcomes. Free State Foundation scholars often have stated that strong
protection of property rights, specifically strong protections of IP rights,
foster creativity, innovation, and economic growth. The strong positive
correlations found in the IPRI are consistent with those statements. For
example, IPRI scores have a correlation coefficient of 0.833 with GDP per
capita, 0.756 with gross capital formation per capita, and 0.904 with global
entrepreneurship. Other strong positive correlations include a 0.900
coefficient with networked readiness/connectivity, 0.807 with telecommunication
infrastructure, 0.842 with civic activism, and 0.818 with overall economic
freedom.
With
these robust positive correlations, it should not be a surprise that the top
20% of countries in the IPRI have an average GDP per capita of over $56,000,
while the bottom 20% of countries have an average GDP per capita under $3,000.
Notably,
China ranks 52nd overall with a score of 5.91. As I stated in a blog last week, although China
does not have the weakest IP system in the world, the size of its economy in
conjunction with its lack of strong IP rights protections and enforcement means
it is a major threat to U.S. creators and innovators. While the IPRI does not give
specific policy proposals about how each country should improve its
intellectual and physical property rights, it provides an aggregate view of how
countries compare to each other and how strong property rights incentivize
economic activity around the globe. The IPRI, along with the Global Innovation
Policy Center’s (GIPC) International IP
Index, provide policymakers useful tools for
assessing ways to improve their country’s property rights systems.
From
the correlations cited above, it is clear that robust physical and IP rights
foster innovation and economic prosperity. As undeveloped and developing
countries (like China, Mexico, and Haiti) continue to strengthen their property
rights protections, U.S. companies will be more inclined to expand international
trade with those countries, creating economic opportunities in impoverished
parts of the world. Robust property rights reduce poverty by incentivizing
economic activity because entrepreneurs understand that their innovations and
earnings will be protected.
Finally,
the U.S. must continue to strive to be a leader throughout the world by
participating in free trade
agreements that
contain effective provisions that support the protection of property rights.
The U.S. ranks first overall in GIPC’s International IP Index, but only 14th
in the IPRI. The United States’ lowest score was in the component of political
stability, followed by judicial independence and ease of access to loans. While
it may be difficult to create a stable political environment overnight,
political instability often is the product of unemployment and a stagnant
economy. Economic indicators suggest that unemployment is very low and the
economy is growing. Expanding international trade and promoting innovation
policy through the protection of property rights should stimulate the economy
even further.
The
United States should strive to improve its IPRI score even further. If it does,
the effort should encourage additional entrepreneurship and economic activity.