On April 27, 2022, the Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR) released the 2022 edition of its annual Special 301 Report (Report). The Report identifies 27 trading-partner nations where the threat to American Intellectual Property (IP) rights is particularly high.
Emphasizing that "[c]ombating … unfair trade policies will encourage domestic investment in the United States, foster American innovation and creativity, and increase economic security for American workers and families," the Report places seven countries – Argentina, Chile, China, India, Indonesia, Russia, and Venezuela – on a "Priority Watch List" and twenty others on a "Watch List."
Among other concerns, the Report focuses on counterfeits, both physical and digital; online and broadcast piracy; trade secret protections; and "indigenous innovation" policies.
China, given statements by government officials suggesting that its approach to IP "should serve the needs of domestic innovation-driven development" at the expense of foreign IP rights holders, receives the lion's share of the Report's attention. Forced technology transfers, onerous licensing terms, IP-centered hacking, counterfeiting, and bad-faith trademarks are just some of the issues specific to China that the Report discusses.
Ukraine, which appeared on the "Priority Watch List" in the 2021 Special 301 Report, is excluded from the 2022 Report in light of its "premeditated and unprovoked further invasion" by Russia earlier this year. Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, was removed from the list after implementing measures to improve its enforcement of IP rights.
The Report also targets the European Union's geographical indications (GI) policies, which can cause problems for certain U.S. trademark holders.
In a March 2022 post to the Free State Foundation's blog, I noted the release of a related USTR annual report, the Notorious Markets List, which "identifies illustrative examples of online and physical markets that reportedly engage in, facilitate, turn a blind eye to, or benefit from substantial copyright piracy and trademark counterfeiting."