Pirating The American Dream: Intellectual Property Theft'S Impact On America'S Place in The Global Economy and Strat-Egies For Improving Enforcement
Pirating The American Dream: Intellectual Property Theft'S Impact On America'S Place in The Global Economy and Strat-Egies For Improving Enforcement
Pirating The American Dream: Intellectual Property Theft'S Impact On America'S Place in The Global Economy and Strat-Egies For Improving Enforcement
110912
SUBCOMMITTEE ON
SECURITY AND INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND
FINANCE
OF THE
COMMITTEE ON
BANKING, HOUSING, AND URBAN AFFAIRS
UNITED STATES SENATE
ONE HUNDRED NINTH CONGRESS
SECOND SESSION
ON
THE CONSEQUENCES OF COUNTERFEITING AND PIRACY AND STRATEGIES FOR SAFEGUARDING INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS INCLUDING CURRENT EFFORTS, AND NEWLY PROPOSED STRATEGIES
(
Available at: http: //www.access.gpo.gov /congress /senate /senate05sh.html
50314 PDF
2009
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SECURITY
AND
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
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FINANCE
(II)
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C O N T E N T S
THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 2007
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WITNESSES
(III)
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U.S. SENATE,
AND INTERNATIONAL TRADE
AND FINANCE,
COMMITTEE ON BANKING, HOUSING, AND URBAN AFFAIRS,
SUBCOMMITTEE
ON
SECURITY
Washington, DC.
The subcommittee met at 2:06 p.m., in room SD538, Dirksen
Senate Office Building, Senator Evan Bayh (Chairman of the Subcommittee) presiding.
Senator BAYH. I am pleased to call the meeting of this subcommittee to order, and I want to thank everyone for your attendance today. I know there are a lot of other important issues, and
we will get right to our panelists after brief opening statements by
members of the committee.
I would like to begin by thanking my colleagues for being with
me here today. Senator Martinez, I look forward to working with
you to have a vigorous agenda for our subcommittee, and I know
that it will be a collegial undertaking because we worked well together in the past on many, many issues.
Sherrod, you and I have known each other since the days of our
youth, being Secretaries of State together way back when, so it will
be pleasure working with you on these issues as well, particularly
since we come from neighboring states.
George, I am going to be introducing you in a moment. We consider your opinion to be so important, you are a panel of one. And
you have had experience as a mayor, as a Governor, in addition to
being in the U.S. Senate, so your perspective on these issues is
greatly valued.
I am going to be introducing the members of the second panel
when Senator Voinovich is done with his testimony.
Just a few brief words of my own. I would like to begin thanking
two additional colleagues who are not with us today, that is Senator Leahy and Senator Specter, the Chairman and Ranking Member of the Judiciary Committee. This issue is one of those issues
where there is overlapping interest between the two committees,
and I want to express my personal appreciation to Senator Leahy
(1)
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and Senator Specter for facilitating our hearing today. I know they
are keenly interested in this topic, and will be taking it up in short
order.
They currently have a very busy agenda on the Judiciary Committee with the Attorney Generals testimony coming up here
shortly, some of the resignations in the Justice Department. It is
a full schedule for them, so I appreciate them letting us take the
lead here today.
Obviously, legislation in this area will be addressed in the Judiciary Committee. Today, we are looking to flesh out the information
necessary to allow legislation to move forward, so I want to thank
the members of the Judiciary Committee for that.
This is a matter of significant urgency and importance for our
country. Intellectual property theft is substantial and a growing
problem, and while we have taken some good steps, particularly
the STOP Initiative and the recently filed filing before the WTO,
more needs to be done, if we are going to make a permanent dent
in this problem.
The estimates are that U.S. businesses lose $250 billion annually
because of intellectual property theft. These are resources that
could be going to profits, to wages, to investment, and obviously in
taxes to our government to meet the costs of Social Security, Medicare, and other pressing priorities. The estimates are that we have
lost over 750,000 jobs in the United States because of intellectual
property theft. Clearly, this is a significant hindrance to employment growth. Ten percent of all pharmaceuticals worldwide are estimated to be fake pharmaceuticals, with obvious health consequences potentially there.
I have seen articles that indicate that up to 90 percent of business software in China is pirated. Fifty percent of business software in India may be pirated, as well. Airline parts, auto parts,
and a variety of other sectors in our economy suffer because of this,
and obviously the recent WTO filing targeted music, films, and
other parts of the entertainment industry.
The Administration has taken some important good first steps,
as I just mentioned, but there are some inherent limitations to
these steps, so we need to continue the progress. For example, the
WTO filing is good, but it addresses only 4 percent of the problem,
and the WTO process itself can take years to reach fruition.
We also need to make sure that this will be the beginning of a
sustained effort. It has taken us some years to get to the point
where we are finally taking some serious steps. I personally hope
that these steps are not in an attempt to gather support for fasttrack legislation or the Korea Trade Initiative, but, instead, to
show a new embrace of vigorous efforts to crack down on intellectual property theft.
This is also important to our Nations security. I will just touch
upon this briefly. I serve on the Intelligence Committee and the
Armed Services Committee. Along with Senator Martinez, we take
up these issues on a regular basis. We seized an Al Qaeda manualI think it was in Afghanistansome time ago, which recommended the sale of counterfeit goods as a possible source of financing for that organization. There were $1.2 million of fake auto
parts seized in Lebanon not long ago. The proceeds from those
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sales were destined for Hezbollah. North Korea engages in illicit
sales of faked goods. There were reports in U.S. News and World
Report at the time of the first World Trade Center attack, that that
attack could quite possibly have been financed by the sale of counterfeit goods.
So, if we are serious about our Nations security, we also need
to be serious about cutting off the funds for those who seek to harm
us; all too frequently that involves the theft of intellectual property.
Finally, let me say that the support for the global trading system
is at stake in this debate. This goes right to the heart of Americas
comparative advantage in the economy of tomorrow. If we invest in
innovation, in educating our population, in investing in research
and development to create new goods, new services, new cures, and
that innovation is stolen from us because intellectual property theft
takes place, the global economy will not work well. It is not a sustainable model, for when our trading partners have a comparative
advantage, we buy from them; but when we have a comparative advantage, they steel from us. That just will not last.
So, I hope that it is possible to be for global trade, but also to
be serious for enforcing the rules of global trade, particularly the
protections of intellectual property. Our businesses, our workers,
and our taxpayers have a right to expect our government to take
vigorous action in the face of such a serious problem, and that is
what has brought us here today.
Senator Martinez, I would be pleased to turn to you for your
opening comments.
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Congress and the Administration have taken strong steps toward
combating intellectual property theft, but we have not done
enough. Since the 1990s, global trade in counterfeits has grown
eight times and even faster than legitimate trade. We need to increase our resources for the departments to fight this problem, and
look for ways that we can increase penalties for the counterfeits
and pirates, and better coordinate with international IP protection
organizations.
So, I am pleased to be joined here today by our distinguished
panel of witnesses, and most of all I want to welcome our dear colleague, Senator Voinovich, and I look forward to hearing from you,
sir.
So, thank you, Mr. Chairman, for this hearing, and I look forward to, as I said, working with you not only on this issue on the
many others we will tackle in the coming months. Thank you.
Senator BAYH. Thank you, Senator Martinez.
Senator Brown.
Senator BROWN. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Thank you for the
work that you do on intellectual property. Senator Bayh and I sat
in his office maybe a month ago talking about these issues, and I
appreciate all of his contribution on this. And Senator Voinovich,
both as Governor and as Ohios senior Senator, has worked hard
especially on manufacturing issues and what it means to our state
and exports and all of that, so thank you, George, for that work.
In the earliest days of our Nation, we sent the marines to the
shores of Tripoli to combat piracy against American goods. The
Barbary pirates are long gone, but the losses we suffer today are
just as real as those at the dawn of the 19th Century.
Since the early 1990s, trade in counterfeits has grown, it is believed, at eight times the rate of legitimate trade and now comprises up to 9 percent of world trade. The largest violators are
China and Russia. According to the International Intellectual Property Alliance, in 2005, China copyright violations accounted for
$2.6 billion. Russia violations accounted for $1.9 billion in U.S.
trade losses. Further, IPR violations from Chinese firms alone cost
American companies up to $24 billion a year in lost revenues.
Fake products compose 15 to 20 percent of all products made in
China. Intellectual property rights have, frankly, been a foreign
concept in the Peoples Republic of China. For decades, under communism, private property was banned; and for centuries before
that, all ideas were owned by the state. Instead of innovation, the
Chinese economic development strategy has largely relied on duplication. Just yesterday, The Washington Post reported on entire cities and towns being developed in Chinas major cities that strive
to be full replicas of U.S. and European cities. Chinese motorists
drive Chery cars that bear a striking similarity to Chevy cars to
towns such as Thames Town outside of Shanghai. Reports suggest that U.S. auto parts producers, a lot of them in Indiana and
Ohio and Pennsylvania, a key industry for much of our country, are
losing up to $9 billion each year due to Chinese fakes.
So, how do we properly address this problem? In 1999, Congress
sought to create a coordinated program within the Administration
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to effectively counter the production and the importation of fake
products. Unfortunately, the Administration has not held up its responsibilities in effectively enforcing IPR violations, as indicated by
the ever-increasing volume of products that violate U.S. patents,
copyrights, and trademarks over the past several years. The IPR
Enforcement Act will work to stop the flood of fake imports into the
U.S. through a comprehensive coordinated strategy in two important ways: First, the bill requires the Administration coordinate
the efforts among the myriad of agencies engaged in stopping IPR
violations under White House leadership. This legislation requires
that agencies share the information and establish formal processes
for cooperation and coordination at the state and local levels.
Second, the bill requires the Administration be held accountable
by submitting to Congress a strategic plan that develops clear and
comprehensive action by the Administration.
We no longer must combat a fleet of pirates off the north coast
of Africa, but the economic damage from piracy is even greater
today. We must show every bit as much resolve in protecting American interests, and this legislation is a good first step. I hope after
this we will put forward the same dedication on dealing with currency issues, with protecting of workers, protecting of the environment, as we do of protecting intellectual property. All of them are
very important.
I commend Senators Bayh and Voinovich for their leadership.
Thanks.
Senator BAYH. Thank you, Senator Brown, for your interest in
this issue, which I know is important for Ohio as well as Indiana
and the rest of the country, and also for putting it in historical context for us. Very interesting.
Senator Casey.
Senator CASEY. Senator Bayh, thank you very much, and thank
you for your leadership; and Senator Martinez, Senator Brown,
and, of course, Senator Voinovich, we would like to see our colleagues as witnesses once in a while. I had the opportunity just
once this year to introduce Governor Randell in a transportation
hearing, and I did not realize what it was like to be on the other
side of that table here, so we are happy to see you here.
I do not need to reiterate some of the points that have already
been made. This is a critically important problem for the world, but
especially for the American economy. Obviously, I represent the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, a tremendous job impact that this
has in a very adverse way.
One statistic which may have already been cited but it bears repeating, just in terms of that one issue, that one concern about
jobs, an estimated 750,000 American jobs are lost due to counterfeit merchandise, and that brief half a sentence tells it all. So, I
think it is a critically important issue for our country, and I appreciate Senator Bayh making this an issue, as well as other members
of this subcommittee as well the full committee; and, Senator Bayh,
I wanted to thank you for that leadership, but I also want to make
sure I am going to strongly support your bill. Is it 522?
Senator BAYH. That is correct. 522.
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Senator CASEY. Thank you.
Senator BAYH. Thank you, Senator Casey. It has been my privilege now to work with two generations of the Casey family, and
look forward to addressing this and many other pressing issues
with you.
Senator Voinovich, thank you for your time. It has been a privilege to work with you for many, many years, and I think your presence here before this panel and our cooperation on this initiative
shows this is not a partisan issue. Something the democrats and
republicans can work well on together. I hope that we can work
well with the Administration on this, as well. It is something that
affects businesses, workers, and I salute your making this a priority, and I am grateful for your leadership, and we are looking forward to hearing from you today. Thank you.
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As a result of these complaints, I held six oversight hearings
about trade and intellectual property in the Homeland Security
and Governmental Affairs Subcommittee on the Oversight of Government Management. Too often during these hearings I heard the
same story: U.S. companies would sell their products overseas,
often working with a local partner; and, soon after, the partner or
some other IP thief would counterfeit and start to sell the very
goods that the U.S. companies had worked to export. Most disturbing to me was the fact that when I first started to conduct
hearings into this problem, the response from our own government
was almost nonexistent. During this time, I continued to express
my concerns to the Administration, first the Secretary of Commerce
Evans and USTR Bob Zoellick, and more recently to my good friend
Rob Portman when he was with the USTR, as well as Secretaries
Coteras and Paulson.
My message was simple: Our government was not doing enough
to address this problem, and it was failing to address companies
that were subject to this theft.
I was not content just to voice my complaints. I voted against
two separate free trade bills. And I am a free trader, but I voted
against two free trade bills to get the Administrations attention to
focus on the problem of intellectual property theft.
Finally, in 2004, President Bush established the Strategic Targeted Organized Piracy Initiative, the STOP Initiative. And while
I thought that was a good first step, I also believed these efforts
needed an orchestra leader, someone who wakes up in the morning
and goes to bed late at night thinking about how to improve IP protection and enforcement. I was pleased that in July of 2005 the
President appointed Chris Israel to serve as the first U.S. coordinator for intellectual property enforcement. While I believe these
efforts started to pay dividends, they have, from what I understand
from people in Ohio and around the countryand I commend the
President for taking the initiative to improve the responsethe
next step is for Congress to enact legislation to improve on this
work, make it permanent, and give Congress an appropriate oversight role.
What I am basically saying is, they worked real hard, they put
something in place, and I think we ought to put it into the concrete
and do it legislatively.
That is why during the 109th I partnered with the Chairman of
this Subcommittee, who also recognized the devastation this problem is having on U.S. manufacturing, and we introduced the Intellectual Property Rights Enforcement Act. Because we did not get
the legislation passed in the 109th, this past February we reintroduced it again. This legislation would improve our existing enforcement efforts: No. 1, providing better domestic enforcement coordination; two, strengthening international enforcement by reaching
out to like-minded countries and improving coordination with these
countries. We just cannot do this by ourselves. We need to have the
same kind of reach-out that we have in intelligence in terms of intellectual property rights. And three, improving Congress oversight
for requiring the development of a governmentwide IP strategic
plan and annual reports to Congress on how these efforts are
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faring; and, fourth, requiring the IP coordinator to work with IP
stakeholders to develop resources to address their needs.
Just as important, this legislation keeps the next administration
from reinventing the wheel in January 2009. In Washington, we all
know we come up with new ideas, and just as all the pieces are
put in place, we have a shift in power and we lose our momentum,
and I do not want to lose the momentum we have gained on the
STOP Initiative. Rather, I want to continue and improve on it. Our
democratic system is another thing that a lot of our competitors do
not have to worry about, and that is something we fail to realize.
Now, you wonder sometimes, are we really organized today in the
Senate, House, the Administration, to deal with this global competition that we are experiencing? Countries like China, sadly, do
not have congressional elections every 2 years and Presidential
elections every 4 years. They do not have to worry with losing their
momentum because, when the regime comes to power, it stays in
power. Stays in power.
Well, I was disappointed we were not able to get this passed in
the 109th. Senator Bayh and I continued to work with business, industry groups, and labor groups to enact it. I have also, as I mentioned, spoken to Senator Leahy and Senator Specter, and I understand that the Judiciary Committee will hold hearings on a number of IP items, including this legislation. I look forward to working
with the members of the Judiciary Committee on this legislation,
and I appreciate the willingness of the Chair and Ranking Member
to examine this important issue. I would note that since we reintroduced this legislation, over 30 organizations have endorsed it, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the AFLCIO, National
Association of Manufacturers, and United Auto Workers.
Now, let me just say this: With the kind of support we have here
in this room, there is not any reason why we cannot get this done
on a bipartisan basis in this Congress. It is long overdue. The last
bastion that we may have to be competitive in that global market
place is our new ideas; and if they could steal our ideas, then we
are in very big trouble.
So, I think this is important to our national security, I think it
is important to our global competitiveness, and I really appreciate
the fact that you have given me a chance to share my thoughts
with you this afternoon. Thank you.
Senator BAYH. Senator, thank you for your long-standing devotion to this issue and for really being one of the moving factors behind the creation of the STOP Initiative. As I understand itI will
ask my colleagues if there are any questions, but as I understand
your testimony, you think this needs to be a major national priority, you think that it needs to be coordinated across the branches
of government, you think it needs to be a global response, and it
must be permanent?
Senator VOINOVICH. Yes, I do, absolutely, and I am hopeful that
the Administration understands how important it is to our country.
I mean, they have done a halfway decent job on this, and now they
have a chance to make it permanent and move forward.
And again, I hope the folks that are sitting behind me will make
it very clear to the Administration how important it is to their respective organizations that this gets done now.
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Senator BAYH. Well, I agree.
Are there questions? Senator Martinez.
Senator MARTINEZ. Senator, I was going to ask you, I know that
permanence is one of the issues, but is there a different enforcement mechanism that the STOP Act would do different from what
is being done now, or is it mostly the fact that it would be established and permanent?
Senator VOINOVICH. There are two thingsthe STOP Act does
not have the international dimension, even though Chris Israel is
traveling around, it does not. He is kind of doing it on his own. But
there is nothing in the legislation that says we ought to be reaching out with other countries in the area of IPR enforcement.
Second, this legislation provides that, in the Office of Budget and
Management, you have got somebody there that is going to look
over how this is all working out, because the problem today with
Chris is that he is, like, the coordinator of some lower-level people.
And I mentioned this morning to OMB Director Portman, that you
need somebody at OMB to sort of be there, and someone says, You
know, this is not working, and agencies know that somebody that
is over them can stay on them. It is very much like what I did. I
had regional representatives when I was Governor, and they were
supposed to get stuff done out in the state, and all of the agencies
of state government were supposed to cooperate with them. Well,
what I did was I had those regional reps send me a weekly report,
so every week I read what was going on. The agency directors
knew I was reading those reports, and they knew that if they were
not cooperating they would hear from me, and I think that is the
kind of oversight that we need if we are going to get serious about
this enforcement.
Senator MARTINEZ. That is all, thank you.
Senator BAYH. One of our witnesses on the next panel from the
GAO will explain how the STOP Initiative has been good, but from
an ongoing perspective there are improvements in the structure
that could make it more either more effective in terms of setting
goals and identifying resources necessary for achieving them and
holding people accountable for following through.
You were sounding more like a former executive, George. It was
refreshing to hear.
Senator Casey.
Senator CASEY. Two quick comments.
Senator, thank you for your testimony, and especially the sense
of urgency that you bring to this issue. That is always a challenge,
it seems, in Washington, and I appreciate the intensity of your
focus on this in the long years of work you put into it.
And second, for mentioning my Pennsylvania colleague, Senator
Specter, in his work on Judiciary, along with Senator Leahy and
others, as part of this team effort to get this job done, but thank
you again.
Senator VOINOVICH. Thank you.
Senator BAYH. I would like to ask the members of the second
panel to please come forward and take your seats.
While you are doing so, let me say that I would be remiss if I
also did not thank our colleague, Senator Dodd, the Chairman of
the full Banking Committee, for facilitating the hearing today. I am
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very grateful for his leadership. He cares deeply about this issue,
and I want to publicly express my gratitude to Senator Dodd.
Gentlemen, thank you very much. I am going to ask for your
help. If I get the pronunciations of any name slightly wrong, do not
hesitate to correct me.
What we would like to do, if it is appropriate, after the introductionsMoises, I think we will begin with you and then go to Dr.
Yager and then Brad Huther, and then finally Tim Demarais, if
that order is appropriate.
Your full statements will be submitted for the record. If we could
try to keep it close to 5 minutes, that will be ideal; of course, members of the committee will try to do the same. But if you run a little
bit over it, that will be OK. If you keep it in the ballpark, that
would be good.
Our first panelist today, Moises Namdid I get that correct?
Mr. NAIM. Yes.
Senator BAYH [continuing]. Is the editor and publisher of Foreign
Policy magazine, a leading publication on international politics and
economics. He has written extensively on the political economy of
international trade and investment, multinational organizations,
economic reforms, and globalization. He is the author and editor of
several books and has written numerous essays and articles. His
regular opinion columns appear in The Financial Times and are
also carried by many of the worlds leading newspapers. Nam is
one of the six members of Time magazines international board of
economists. Moises, thank you for joining us today.
I will make the other introductions, and we will begin with the
statements.
Also with us today is Dr. Loren Yager. Dr. Yager is currently
serving as Director of the International Affairs and Trade Team of
the U.S. Government Accounting Office (GAO), where he is responsible for international trade and related issues. Dr. Yager has recently completed reports and congressional testimony on topics including China import remedies, global corporate/social responsibility, global intellectual property protection, offshoring of U.S.
services, terrorist financing, the World Trade Organization, Conflict Diamonds, Chinas WTO compliance, the Maquiladora industry, container security, and a variety of other subjectsyou have
been a busy man, Dr. Yagerparticularly in the subject that gathers us here today. I want to thank you and your staff for your very
thoughtful work. It was very analytical and very detailed, so I am
grateful for your sharing the thoughts that you and your staff have
here with us today.
Also with us is Mr. Brad Huther. Thank you for joining us today.
Mr. Huther coordinates the U.S. Chamber of Commerces Intellectual Property Enforcement Program. The Chamber is a business
federation representing 3 million companies, associations, state and
local Chambers and American Chambers of Commerce abroad. Mr.
Huther joined the Chamber in January 2005 to advance its fight
against counterfeiting and piracy. His commitment to strengthening intellectual property systems worldwide is evident through
his work as President and CEO of the International Intellectual
Property Institute, Special Attach at the World Intellectual Property Organization in Geneva, and Associate Commissioner of the
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U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. Mr. Huther, I would like to
thank you and the Chamber for your presence today.
Just as Senator Voinovichs presence and Senator Martinezs
presence demonstrates that this is a bipartisan undertaking. The
Chambers interest in this, along with the AFL-CIO, the United
Auto Workers and others shows that this can unite management
as well as labor, and I would particularly like to thank you for your
cooperative approach toward complementing those steps that have
been taken thus far, but also looking to how we could improve and
buildupon what has been done. So, I want to thank you for the
spirit you have brought to this dialog.
Last, but by no means least, we have Timothy Demarais, Vice
President of ABRO Industries, Inc. It is good to have a fellow hoosier with us here, adding some additional midwest common sense
to the dialog this morning, and also to help us put a human face
on this problem. Tim has spent 33 years with ABRO Industries.
Based in South Bend, Indiana, ABRO sells adhesives and other
products. As Vice President of International Sales and Marketing,
Mr. Demarais developed the ABRO brand concept which has spearheaded company growth from $4 million in sales in 1974 to a projected $100 million in 2007. Mr. Demarais has made more than 100
overseas business trips since joining the firm, doing business in
over 150 countries. He helped ABRO achieve the Presidents E
Award in 1991 and the Presidents E Star Award in 2005. He was
featured with ABROs company President in the Wall Street Journal for a 2004 cover story on combating counterfeiting in China.
Demarais personally led raids on foreign firms that were illegally
importing fake ABRO products, resulting in the seizure and destruction of thousands of cartons of counterfeit merchandise. He received his BBA in marketing from the University of Notre Dame.
During his junior year, he studied international business at Sophia
University Tokyo. Tim, we look forward to hearing from you again
today.
Dr. Nam, let us begin with you.
Mr. NAIM. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for giving me the opportunity to be before you today. Before entering into the details of my
presentation of my testimony, I want to recognize you and your
leadership, Mr. Chairman, in battling the problems created by the
booming global trade in counterfeits as well as your sincere interest
in seeking innovative solutions to contain this growing threat, having followed your efforts and those of Senator Voinovich and other
members of the committee for years in trying to untangle or understand and find innovative and interesting ways of dealing with
this.
Today, I will make five brief points concerning the international
trade in stolen intellectual property, and I will conclude the remarks with a proposal for your consideration.
First, the international trade in counterfeited goods is just one
of many illicit trades that has recently boomed. It is very important
to understand that the trade in counterfeits is just one segment of
a booming black economy that, thanks to globalization and some
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other changes that took place in the nineties, have acquired unprecedented scope and consequences for the global economy, and it
is undermining institutions and politics everywhere in the world.
The illegal international trade in people, narcotics, timber, industrial waste, human organs, weapons of mass destruction, and myriad other goods is booming, as I said, and there are many interesting similarities among all these traits. Smuggling luxury products from Asia to Europe may look very different than smuggling
cocaine from the Andes to Florida or illegal workers to Spain or
small arms to Africa.
Yet, the economic forces, organizational arrangements, and business models driving these trades, as well as the behavior of the
players involved, are strikingly similar. They are not the same people or the same criminal networks, but the forces that drive them
and the way they are organized and operate, they are much in common. Government responses have also been quite similar, and unfortunately in all cases their success has proven very elusive. There
is hardly any country that can claim major progress in containing
the growth of any of these illicit trades. Therefore, a major implication of this first point is that there is much that can be learned
from past and current efforts aimed at curbing illicit traffic, trafficking in other markets and products.
In some cases, these traffics are connected. The vendor that sells
you a fake luxury bag in the streets in Manhattan or a few blocks
from here is often as illicit as the bag itself. The network that traffics in counterfeits are connected to the networks of trafficking in
illegal workers, and those in turn are connected to the networks
that specialize in money laundering.
My second point is that a common mistake that I have found in
legislation aimed at controlling illicit trades everywhere is that too
often it assumes that governments are more capable and effective
than what has proven to be the case. There are many reasons for
this performance gap, but the most important is that governments
are very constrained when they have to operate outside their national jurisdiction. The natural habitat of a government is inside a
nations borders; instead, the national habitat of traffickers is in
between national borders.
While traffickers are perfectly at home when operating illegally
across borders, governments are slowed down, indeed often paralyzed when having to operate internationally. This means that in
order to be effective in battling international smuggling rings, government needs to be selective in what it tries to achieve. It is unrealistic to expect government to combat every aspect of counterfeiting. Therefore, selectivity and modesty in the choice of goals assigned to government agencies should be a crucial test of any legislation in this area.
The third point is that another frequent characteristic of
antitrafficking campaigns worldwide is that they all tend to concentrate more on constraining the supply of the smuggled goods
that are limiting their demands. This fact is well-known in the case
on the War on Drugs in the United States or what happens with
illegal workers.
It is important to remember that the boom in pirated goods owes
as much to a growing demand as it does to growing supply, where
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talking literally about billions of consumers around the world who
are willingindeed, eagerto bogus facsimiles of products at a
fraction of the price of the original lawful goods. This market of
consumers is served by millions of some of the most innovative,
ruthless, and managerially and technologically sophisticated entrepreneurs at work today in the global economy.
This is a powerful market and is driven more by high profits
than by low morals, by demand as well as by supply. Thus, approaching this fight purely from a law enforcement or legalistic
perspective aimed at curbing the supply will miss the fact that we
are in the presence of a gigantic market with millions of buyers
and sellers and immense volumes of merchandise and money
changing hands.
My fourth point is simple and brief, and you have already noted,
and it is in the legislation, and that is that no country can successfully tackle this problem acting alone. A global problem cannot be
solved with unilateral national efforts containing the growth of the
global counterfeiting market inevitably requires the effective coordination of several nations acting in concert.
My final point is that patents, copyrights, trademarks and other
legal instruments are increasingly failing to protect the rights of
owners of intellectual property. Brands, designs, formal software
and content with commercial value are being routinely stolen, copied, and sold worldwide at a fraction of the price charged by the
original owners. Entire industries have been devastated by piracy.
It is apparent that the ability of governments to enforce intellectual property rights is rapidly declining. The governments are not
being able to stop this. Moreover, there are good reasons to assume
this decline cannot be stopped, reversed, or even slowed down in
the short term. The implication of this point is not that governments have to abandon the fight to ensure intellectual property
rights are protected and enforced at home and abroad, but other
governments should not be held accountable for their complacency
and often their complicity with the counterfeiting industry.
Rather, the implication is that governments need to be supported
in their efforts to combat this illicit trade by the most intensive use
possible of anticopying technologies. There is much that technology
can do and is already doing to safeguard products from illegal copy.
I, therefore, believe that it is very promising market-based solution
is to include in any legislation mechanisms that will stimulate and
accelerate the development and adoption of new technology by the
business sector. These technologies will make counterfeiting products far more difficult than what they are now to copy.
I am convinced that, in the foreseeable future, technology, not
patents, sanctions or other traditional means for fighting intellectual property theft will become critical in protecting the intellectual
property of innovators, creators, and artists.
Thank you again, Mr. Chairman and members of the subcommittee, for affording me this opportunity to testify before you.
Senator BAYH. Thank you, Dr. Nam.
Dr. Yager.
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STATEMENT OF LOREN YAGER, DIRECTOR OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS AND TRADE, GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE
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Although STOP identifies organizational roles and responsibilities with respect to individual agencys STOP activities, it does not
specify who will provide oversight and accountability among the
agencies who are carrying out the strategy. This lack-of-accountability features limit the strategys usefulness as a management
tool for effective oversight by Congress as well as accountability to
the private sector and to consumers who STOP aims to protect.
In terms of long-term viability, we point out that STOP has no
permanence as a Presidential initiative and, therefore, no guarantee that it will exist after the end of this Administration. While
the most recent annual report describes many STOP activities, it
does not explain how NIPLECC principals plan to carry out the responsibilities mandated by the Congress. From the beginning of
NIPLECC, Congresss goal has been to institutionalize law enforcement coordination, and our work suggests that this goal has not
yet been met.
In GAOs recent report on this subject, we included recommendations to address these issues of accountability and long-term viability. Our discussions with the IP coordinator, in preparation for this
testimony, indicated that NIPLECC has taken some steps to address GAOs recommendations, such as working with OMB to understand government priorities and resources related to IP enforcement.
Mr. Chairman, I would note that the Bayh-Voinovich legislation
proposes more fundamental changes to the current coordinating
structure. For example, by creating IPEN, it eliminates the need
for NIPLECC and resolves the lack of permanence that is of concern with the STOP Initiative. In addition, the legislation requires
the new coordinating structure to prepare a plan that addresses
key elements of an effective strategy, building in mechanisms for
accountability, oversight, and strengthening leadership. These
changes are consistent with the key findings of our report.
Mr. Chairman, this concludes my statement. I would be happy
to answer any questions that you have.
Senator BAYH. Dr. Yager, thank you very, very much.
Mr. Huther.
STATEMENT OF BRAD HUTHER, SENIOR ADVISOR FOR INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ENFORCEMENT, U.S. CHAMBER OF
COMMERCE
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and piracy that now numbers almost 300 trade associations and
companies, whose commitment is to do one thing, and that is to
work toward the development of solutions that can be transferred
to companies everywhere, not just those of the Chamber or not just
those of the associations and companies that are present in our
program, because we think it is criticalit has been brought out
earlierthat without the leveraged efforts of anyone and everyone
who is involved in this problem, both directly and indirectly, including consumers, who sometimes are not associated with the
problem, this problem is not going to go away.
The features that you have included in your proposed legislation,
we think, builds upon the solid foundation that others have already
addressed. The work of the Administration, together with the work
of the business coalition that the Chamber now represents shows
good progress, but if we were to stay the course, doing what we are
now doing, we believe we would not be able to effectively deliver
the kind of global solution that is really necessary.
So, your approach in terms of engaging and elevating the importance of this public policy issue, and including the involvement of
stakeholders and foreign governments and the law enforcement
community without impinging on their current authorities to continue to do what they have been doing before and to make decisions as they are authorized to make them, we think, is the right
overall strategy to engage in.
The Chamber, in its coalition, is working on facets of this program that have been addressed, including the technology issue,
how we can deal with Internet problems, where a lot of the trade
and illicit goods is occurring, to transferring knowledge to many of
our small and medium enterprises that lack the resources first to
even protect their supply chain, if they know they have got a problem with it; or, second, to protect their intellectual property rights,
if they file for patent or trademark or copyright protection in foreign locations. It is an expensive undertaking, and no one is capable of doing this alone.
So, therefore, the framework that you are establishing, in my
opinion, and in the Chambers opinion, is building on the best
premise: Lets keep the best parts of what we have learned through
STOP, lets continue to engage the business community because we
are not only knocking on governments door or asking for things to
be done. We are pledging our resources and our expertise and our
talent to add to that of the government. And maybe at some point
in time when we engage other partners, as the Administration has
already begun to do, the E.U.-U.S. framework has promise for
doing some very important work in that region. The Security and
Prosperity Partnership Agreement in North America, while lacking
in E.U. and U.S. collaboration, I think, has the chance to do the
very same thing in our part of the world. APAC and other organizations like them are doing them together.
So, your IPEN framework starts connecting all the stars in the
constellation at a time when I think those stars are properly
aligned to do and leverage the work that needs to be done on a
much grander scale than we have been able to justify to date.
I will close by indicating that I had the privilege of testifying before then Chairman Voinovichs subcommittee on the issues of
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STOP and on the issues of NIPLECC. I said then, and I say now:
I think they do very good work. I know they are because they come
to the Chamber on average once a month to tell us what kind of
progress they are making.
If I had one criticism, which your bill address, I said then that
I thought that if the Government Performance and Results Act
Framework were invoked in this area, it would become a lot clearer
for industry to understand where the government is going, enable
us to understand how we might redirect some of our activities and
resources so as to support a national strategy to deal with this, and
linking that national strategy to an international one.
So, again, Mr. Chairman, we thank you for your leadership on
this issue. It is clear the Chamber supports the enactment of this
legislation. More importantly, I think I could tell you that the
Chamber, together with its working coalition, stands ready to help
and contribute to the successful implementation of what we think
is one of the most important public strategies that the Congress
can undertake in the current session. So, thank you.
Senator BAYH. Thank you very much. We are in favor of what
works, and building upon past successes and collaborating going
forward to improve the effectiveness of this effort, and you and
your organization have been very instrumental on that, so once
again I want to thank you for your contribution, both past and future.
Mr. Demarais, our representative from the real world. We are
looking forward to hearing from you.
Mr. DEMARAIS. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for giving me the opportunity to testify regarding one of Americas most contentious
foreign trade issues: The theft of intellectual property worldwide.
I spent my entire career33 yearsworking overseas combating
legitimate competition. Just the last few years I realize there is
something else out there that is not equal playing field, and hopefully today we try to balance that playing field.
I feel ABRO is one of the most unique, one of the most innovative
trading companies in the United States. We are known as the buccaneers of the trading world from what we have done in the past.
We initially concentrated on selling ABRO products in Third World
markets, and there is no place we would not travel to introduce our
ABRO brand. We visited and did business in diverse markets such
as Nigeria, Congo, Pakistan, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Sierra
Leonejust to name a few of the diverse markets. We now sell our
ABRO products in over 150 countries.
In time, our ABRO automotive products became the brand of
choice in many global markets, but unfortunately today the ABRO
name has also become the brand of choice to counterfeit by unscrupulous manufacturers worldwide. We recognized early that our
trademark was one of our most important assets, and over the past
28 years we have registered the ABRO trademark in 167 countries.
So, we were doing our job. We had spent hundreds of thousands
of dollars registering our trademark, and ironically we have spent
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an equal amount in defending our trademark worldwide against
importers of counterfeit ABRO products.
Although we could point to many examples of counterfeiters overseas, one foreign company that has taken intellectual property violation to a new level is Hunan Magic Company in Hunan, China.
We did not know we had this problem until 2001, when I received
an E-mail from our ABRO distributor, requesting that he would
like to buy the ABRO products from our Chinese subsidiary. I
knew we did not have a Chinese subsidiary, and went to the Canton Trade Fair later that year and was absolutely shocked to see
Hunans Magic booth, which had a full display of all of our ABRO
products, and the company was actively selling ABRO products to
many overseas customers, including my own.
The company had literally stolen our corporate identity, stating
they owned the ABRO name, which, of course, is not true. I immediately contacted the show officials and advised them that this
company was illegally selling ABRO products. The officials agreed
to raid the booth, and I was stunned when the general manager of
the Chinese company produced documentation that showed they
had the rights to the trademark in China. It actually was in a
trademark registration. It was an application, but to them they
took it as the official trademark.
There was obviously uncertainty at this point, until I picked up
a sample of our ABRO Epoxy that Hunan Magic was displaying in
their booth and selling to my customers. Our ABRO Epoxy is a
product that I personally developed 20 years ago. At that time, we
were not doing a hundred million dollars. We were somewhat of a
low-budget operation. I had taken a picture of my wife applying
epoxy to our bicycle in our house and put this photo on a blister
card similar to this. This product has become one of our most popular selling ABRO products with millions of units being sold annually.
I immediately asked the general manager of Hunan Magic who
is this lady on the ABRO Epoxy card? He told the show officials
it was some western model.
I reached into my wallet, pulled out on a picture of my wife
which finally convinced the show authorities we actually own the
trademark, and they closed down the booth, and Hunan Magic was
cited for using the ABRO trademark illegally.
We thought the matter was settled and we were very happy,
until the next trade show, when Hunan Magic changed the packaging slightly by deleting the face of my wife and replacing it with
the face of an Asian woman but keeping everything else the same,
including the ABRO name. As you could see, they are identical.
This story was a subject of a cover feature in the Wall Street
Journal, and we thought the notoriety would convince the Chinese
Government to do something by controlling this renegade Chinese
manufacture. Unfortunately, their illegal activity has become more
blatant, as Hunan Magic is now selling ABRO products in all our
major markets, and the general manager has publicly stated that
his ABRO brand is one of the most successful brands they have
ever introduced. That is why we are thrilled that a new act is being
introduced in the Senate by Senator Voinovich and, of course, yourself. We all know about the War on Terror that is being fought
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globally, but in the business community we look at intellectual
property violations as a War on Economic Terrorism.
As these companies who are counterfeiting are stealing patents,
trademarks, ideas, and designs from American companies. It was
encouraging to note that recently the U.S. Government announced
that would it ask the World Trade Organization to organize meetings to address deficiencies in Chinas protection of the intellectual
property rights on books, music, videos, and movies. However,
there was no mention of many other U.S. products that are being
counterfeited, including automotive parts and accessories. We only
hope that the U.S. Government will address these deficiencies in
all areas of intellectual property violations.
The past 5 years have been most frustrating as ABROs biggest
competitor is not STP, General Electric, or some other well-known
automotive chemical manufacturer. Our biggest competitor has become ABRO products from China, which is clearly not how our
American dream to ABROnize the world was expected to play out.
We ask that the U.S. Government treat intellectual property matter more seriously and pass legislation that will correct these trade
injustices and then provide agencies overseas the effective muscle
to enforce the new trade legislation.
Thank you for giving me the opportunity to testify today and
allow me to vent some of my personal past frustrations on this
matter. We continue to fight the battle in the overseas sales
trenches every day, but we do need some help from the generals
back here in Washington. The War on Economic Terrorism can be
won, but it is going to take a concentrated effort by everyone here
in Washington to force China and other countries who violate intellectual property to comply with their WTO obligations, which requires these economic powers to enforce intellectual property laws
in their own country. Thank you.
Senator BAYH. Mr. Demarais, thank you very much. We are
happy to provide you a forum to vent your frustrations, but more
than that we would like to provide you with action to address the
problem that has been affecting you. And I wish I could say that
your testimony here today was some sort of aberration, but regrettably it reflects the experience of too many American businessmen
and women who have attemptedwho have had to combat this
kind of problem often without the kind of backup, as you say, from
the generals in Washington that you deserve, so thank you for
that.
By the way, Senator Martinez, you should know Mr. Huther said
very nice things about you in your absence.
Senator MARTINEZ. I am sorry, I had to step out for a minute,
I am sorry, but thank you, sir.
Senator BAYH. We will make sure the record notes that.
We begin some questions now. I will start, and then I will limit
myself to 5 minutes and turn to you; and, if there are further questions, we will keep going.
I am going to start in the order in which our witnesses testified,
but let me just start, Moises, not only for you, but other panelists,
judging by your written testimony and oral presentations today, it
is my impression that all of you would agree this is a growing problem, a growing phenomena. It is not contained. It is not static. It
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is, in fact, continuing apace, unfortunately. I think, Moises, you
particularly said that there is a degree of humility in our effort to
combat this through traditional methods, so we should takethe
steps that have been taken have been good and positive. We need
to build on them, but take perhaps with a grain of salt or some degree of skepticism claims by anyone that material advancements
have been made in containing the problem. Is that a fair description?
Mr. NAIM. It is, Mr. Chairman, and essentially I want to reiterate a central message, and that is that I would love to see companies like ABRO and Mr. Demarais have incentive and additional
possibilities to use their ingenuity to try to find ways that would
make the copying of the products more difficult. I am not suggesting that there should not be legislation and all sorts of initiatives, local and international, to protect companies like ABRO from
the fact that the products are stolen, but it would be wonderful if
they are giventhat that same ingenuity would be stimulated to
find ways to make it harder because, by the time we make these
processes take place, they will continue to suffer significant losses.
Senator BAYH. Are aware of any efforts along those lines to promote technologies that would combatof course, in the entertainment arena, we are familiar, but perhaps a bit harder in the manufactured goods.
I must say when you first suggested it and I read it with in your
submitted testimony, I think it is an excellent idea, but the first
thing that crossed my mind today when you said it and I read it
was to wonder how long it would be before the technology intended
to protect IP was itself stolen.
Mr. NAIM. That is one aspect, and the other aspect is tat not all
products will be amenable to be protected by physical, by protections and technology, and we have to recognize that.
But, Mr. Huther can tell you that, in the business sector, this is
already happening, a lot of the companies are complaining and are
suffering, are just not waiting for legislation, are just not waiting
for the patents. They are already taking matters in their own technological hands and investing significant amounts of money in research and development of products, processes, and technologies
that would make copying harder. As you said, Mr. Chairman, in
music and videos and technology and software, there is a significant push in that direction.
All I am saying is that it will be very interesting to find ways
to create even more incentives for these companies to do this.
Senator BAYH. Let me ask you about, as we await the creation
of technologies that enable us to make the kind of advancements
we all hope to make, as you pointed out, this is a transnational
problem that needs a multilateral response. Part of our legislative
suggestion would be to identify countries with similar interests
that are willing to adhere to state-of-the-art standards and try to
build out from there.
The Justice Department has offered a different opinion. They do
not think that is a useful suggestion. For example, they say that
the exclusion of China and Russia from such an effort would make
it ineffective. What is your reaction to that?
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Mr. NAIM. I tend to agree, Mr. Chairman, with the Justice Department. I think that this problem cannot be solved by excluding
parts of the chain. And yes, China may be an epicenter of manufacturing and exports of counterfeited goods, but the United States is
an epicenter of the distribution and purchase of these goods. So,
there are as many violations of intellectual property taking place
in the streets of the United States and in the United States by customers that are buying these illegal products as there are companies in China and elsewhere that are selling these products.
So, again, as I said in my statement, this is a problem that has
suppliers, but it also has customers, and therefore it is very important to integrate, to have an integrated view of this.
Senator BAYH. I see my timeI have run up against the 5minute limit.
Mel, why dont I turn to you.
Senator MARTINEZ. Thank you, Evan.
Mr. Nam, I wanted to ask you your thoughts, and I glean from
your testimony it is a difficult issue for governments to enforce intellectual property in their own countries, but I was wondering how
much of it was due to the difficulty of enforcement and how much
was just benign neglect on their part and not caring enough to do
it and, therefore, the implications of that in terms of trade agreements we entered into and the seriousness of purpose with which
we might be able to enforce our trade agreements.
Mr. NAIM. Yes, Senator Martinez, that is a very good question,
and I agree with you and others that have noted the importance
of placing this issue more in the center of the legislative efforts and
taking more initiatives, and I welcome the bill, and I think this discussion and debate is very important.
So, there is some benign neglect, but I would just be careful and
cautious in just chalking it down to lack of political will in some
governments. That may be the case, but let us remember that
there are very powerful economic interests associated with this industry, and that in many countries these interests are far more
powerful even than governments.
I do not know that in some countries governments can risk the
instability and political upheaval that would create taking on what
is essentially in many countries the biggest game in town. For
many countries, this is the largest employment-producing, revenueproducing industry, and people that are in it are involved and very
often part of the government, are part of the military, part of the
judiciary. And so it isand I understand that working with governments that are so penetrated by the traffickers poses important
questions and dilemmas.
All I am trying to show is the complexity of the issue and outline
the limitations of legislative initiatives, not particularly this one,
but to be careful not to create the illusion of solutions, but be careful and understand the limits of this activity.
Senator MARTINEZ. I think it is very enlightening what you say,
but also a bit frightening to think that they may be bigger than
the governments in other countries, but I would think that in
places like India and China, which are such huge trading partners
of ours, would be two places where more enforcement by the government and more of an interest by the government might be help-
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ful, and I am not sure that would translate to every other country,
but certainly there.
Mr. Huther, I wonder if you might touch on, through the Chamber, what do you see business doing to assist themselves in the
vein of what was being suggested through their own technology
and so forth to bring about change in this arena, even before legislation.
Mr. HUTHER. I would be delighted, Senator. The Chamber, together with its coalition, has seven active working groups, one of
which focuses specifically on the issue of not only current technology but leading-edge or next-generation technology that could
protect products at some various stages of the supply chain. We
have learned from the preliminary research that old technology like
radio frequency identifiers that have been around for 40 years or
more, the counterfeiters and pirates have quite adroitly learned
how to take advantage of that technology and turn it into a way
of protecting their part of the supply chain, the illegitimate part.
But you could find examples of holograms, you can find examples
of watermarks, you can find examples of all different types of technology that industry has decided to try at sometimes considerable
expense. It is not inexpensive to put something that costs a penny
or a dime on literally millions of products that you are shipping all
over the planet.
I think the bottom line is we are dealing with a very sophisticated, organized element that understands that, if they could defeat the technology, they could enhance the profitability of what
they are doing. So, they are probably investing more resources in
finding ways to invest in the technology we are trying to employ
and transfer the benefits of to companies all over the planet, but
most notably the small and medium enterprises who really do not
have a good understanding of what this kind of technology can and
should do for them, but it is a high-risk thing. The latest technology becomes yesterdays work-around for counterfeiters.
Senator MARTINEZ. Mr. Chairman, I wanted to thank you for the
hearing and, as I told you at the beginning, I am going to catch
an airplane to meet a speaking engagement in Florida tonight, but
I want to thank the panel before being here. And it seems to me
that at a time when entities that are really outside governments
and outside nations present the greatest risk to national security
that this type of an industry that also operates really outside the
law and outside our governmental supervision and oversight and
regulations is the very thing that, in confluence with one another,
can continue to fund and enhance the threat to our national security that we see from terrorism.
So, it seems like an adjoining part of terrorism, if we think about
it in that broader context. But thank you very much for this important hearing, and thank you.
Senator BAYH. Have a safe trip.
Mr. Yager, I would like to move to you, if I could, and I would
like to get back to the Justice Department and some of the concerns they expressed about our proposed approach. Lets start with
the issue of stovepiping and information sharing. The Department
seems to be under the impression that information is being ade-
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quately shared horizontally across government agencies and that
that is not an issue. What is your opinion?
Mr. YAGER. Chairman Bayh, we have been doing work on this
particular subject now for a number of years, and I guess it depends on your perspective, but I think maybe their expectations are
not in the same place as the Congresss expectations in terms of
information sharing.
For example, I think the performance of NIPLECC itself is one
that I think that the Department of Justice has generally been supportive of the way that it was set up, but unfortunately it has not
reached or has not changed the expectations of the Congress in a
number of ways. For example, in the budget process, the Congress
has made a number of comments about the quality of the
NIPLECC report, particularly before the most recent report in saying it has not met their expectations in terms of timeliness and
quality. So, I think, from the perspective of the Congress, it has not
met expectations.
In addition, I think as Brad mentioned before, the private sector
has also expressed some questions about the effectiveness of coordination in this area.
Finally, there is another group that has been set upit is called
the Intellectual Property Center (IPR Center)which was supposed to be a combination of the Department of Justice and the
FBI and Department of Homeland Security and ICE, which was
supposed to be co-located where those folks work together to share
leads. Unfortunately, the promise of that type of coordination has
not been fulfilled, whereas the Department of Homeland Security
has staff that apparently the Department of Justice has not been
able to put full-time people in there. Now, I understand there is no
one actually staffing that center.
So, the expectations may be the different. We think there is a lot
of room for improvement. As I mentioned in my opening statement,
we have another report coming out shortly which has to do with
intellectual property protection as it is achieved at the U.S. border.
And again, based on the work we have done both speaking to the
private sector as well as talking to government officials, we think
there are significant improvements that can be made in this area.
Senator BAYH. In your previous comments about the need for
permanence, about the need for benchmarks for progress, about allocating scarce resources in the maximum way, all those sorts of
things, are there additional steps on top of what is currently being
done that would benefit our efforts?
Mr. YAGER. Absolutely. We think that many of these sound somewhat complicated to say national strategy, but, in fact, many of the
things we talk about are very common sense, talking about the
risks to achieving the strategy, talking about the resources. Obviously, trying to have a dialog with the Congress, you need to be
able to talk about resource, resource needs, and what are the risks
out there that need to be addressed; and we think that having that
in a strategy where this kind of a dialog could take place both with
the Congress, with the private sector, would help achieve some of
those goals.
Senator BAYH. I thought it was interesting in Justices letter to
Chairman Leahyand we do not have the Congressional Research
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Service at the witness table today, but they debunked an additional
critique which was kind of ironic since they claim that information
sharing was very good in taking place, they suggested our approach
would require them to share information, which the Justice Department was not accustomed to doing when it touched upon criminal prosecutions and that kind of thing, and the Congressional Research Service pointed out there are concerns in this regard were
perhaps not well-founded.
Mr. YAGER. If I could make a couple of comments on that, I think
the one thing that is important to remember is that Justice is a
very important part of this group going forward, and the group
going forward, their main purpose is intellectual property enforcement. So, it seems hard to imagine why the Justice Department
would be so concerned about a group trying to weaken, in fact,
what the group was set up to achieve. Again, Justice will be an important part of this group and they would be able to contribute to
this discussion.
And I think also in that legislation you have the savings clause
which allows them to determine whether the kinds of efforts or actions would be contrary to law or procedure or regulation, which
I believe also seems to provide a reason why it would not necessarily challenge the kinds of things they have been concerned
about.
If I could just make one more comment relative to Senator Martinezs point. When we are looking at different countries around the
worldand I think this is a point that Dr. Nam saidthere certainly is a difference between trying to enforce rules and get the
cooperation of a country like Paraguay, which really does not have
a large domestic market, does not have much of a legitimate trade,
versus China, where, in fact, they do stand to lose a lot.
So, I think the comments about, you know, using leverage in a
place like Paraguay or others that do not have a large domestic
market or do not have a lot of legitimate business, certainly that
would be a big challenge, whereas in China there is legal activity
and significant issues to be lost.
The other thing is as China develops and develops more firms
and some of the intellectual property on their own, there would be
more domestic constituencies with which to work so that they can
say, Yes, we are losing our own intellectual property as well as
risking U.S. firms or taking intellectual property from the United
States.
So, we think there is an important distinction. There are certainly countries, even China, where providing incentives to improve
will eventually help their domestic manufacturers, as well.
Senator BAYH. Dr. Nam, you were nodding your head?
Mr. NAIM. I completely agree with Dr. Yager, and that is a point
I made in my written statement about the need for selectivity and
being very selective and very targeted in these efforts; and, therefore, that means differentiating the Chinas from the Paraguays becomes a very important element for their success and precondition
for success of this bill.
Senator BAYH. Thank you.
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Mr. Huther, about information sharing across government agencies, what has been the experience of your members in that regard?
Can that be improved upon?
Mr. HUTHER. Yes, sir, and in many respects I communicated that
as recently as Tuesday of this week.
Senator BAYH. I am sure your members found it to be shocking
that the government was not seamlessly communicating horizontally across departments?
Mr. HUTHER. It is difficult to do, I must say. I formerly worked
in the government, so I think I can speak with some sense of the
complications and complexities that are associated with it.
Having said that, we believe that without that kind of information sharing and without creating an avenue for business to be
kept informed on the basis of whatever intelligence business can
provide into that data base or network of information is critical.
The Chamber of Commerce is together with one agency and the Department of Commerce financing a new attempt to allow industry
groups and law enforcement authorities to create via Interpol a
new form of intelligence which could be monitoring activities globally realtime, so that, as a counterfeiting criminal act occurs in one
country or one port, that information can be uploaded into the data
base, and, more importantly, used very much like your legislation
proposes: To be used by Interpol to compare and contrast against
the same people doing money-laundering activities, such as Dr.
Nam mentioned; or human trafficking, which oftentimes can be a
subset of the counterfeiting piracy milieu.
So, we want to create as many opportunities to have new forms
of information, share it as widely as we can, not to compelwe do
not have the authority to compel people to use it, but to make it
available to them in ways that the law enforcement community, especially in the United States, finds very helpful.
If I could comment on Dr. Nams comment about the Justice Department view of the question of how one goes about dealing with
other foreign governments being a step in the wrong direction, I
have informed them that I do not see it that way. I see your legislation supplementing already extant agreements that the U.S. Government has entered into to deal with transnational counterfeiting
shipments of both pirated as well as counterfeiting works.
So, if we can view this, what I see your legislation doing, or what
we at the Chamber see your legislation doing, is adding value of
condition of collaboration, condition of coordination, but elevating it
to a much higher level. So, if I could use the word that all of this
is aimed at supplementing what is out there and supplanting
nothing, I think that is exactly what your legislation is designed
to do.
Senator BAYH. We were looking for allies, both horizontally in
our country and vertically internationally, to hear sharing information across jurisdictions. Obviously, we were scrupulous in writing
it in a way that would not compromise criminal prosecutions, but,
that said, sharing information to the extent possible to enhance our
efforts across agency responsibilities; and then globally looking for
countries with similar standards, similar interests, starting, as you
said in your book, and building from there to include those who are
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working toward meeting those standards. Obviously, those are part
of the problem you have to engage. You just cannot leave them out.
Just two more questions for you. I take it by your comments you
think that this should be a permanent priority for our government
and not to depend on the ebbs and flows of priorities of different
administrations and that is something useful that the legislation
would bring, a permanence feature?
Mr. HUTHER. That is one of the primary advantages we see.
Senator BAYH. One other interesting thing I would appreciate
your take on, I read with some interest the articles following the
Administrations filing of the recent WTO complaint with regard to
entertainment, intellectual property and that kind of thing, and
some of the articles tend to suggest this, taken in concert with
some other recent actions by the Administration, constitute a gettough approach on trade, and there is always sort of a subtext. Is
this the beginning of a protectionist move in our country, or are
these steps designed to head off protectionist mood in our country,
and your organization has been to expand for global trade. I hope
it would be possible for expanding global trade, but also be for vigorous enforcement of the rules that govern global trade, in this case
particularly those rules which in the long run will augment innovation that not only helps our country but all those who will benefit
from it.
So, is it possible to be for more vigorous enforcement of intellectual property standards and at the same time be for trade and not
be labeled a protectionist?
Mr. HUTHER. The Chamber does not find any inconsistency in
those whatsoever. If the President of the Chamber, Tom Donahue,
were here, he would use a phrase which he uses often, which is:
The only thing the United States business community seeks in its
international trading arrangements is a level playing field. And,
frankly, I should point out, Mr. Chairman, that this is not just
about China, this is not just about foreign governments. We have
a very serious problem of inbred counterfeiting activity going on
within the United States. So, we have to be as vigorous in our approach to making sure that we take steps to create an equivalent
level playing field for our foreign trading partners, as we would expect them to do the same. And given the level playing field, we
would look forward to the opportunity to have U.S. industry compete against the best in the rest of the world. That is all we ask.
Senator BAYH. That is always been my altitude, as well.
Mr. Demarais, to you, just one brief comment. I hope that your
wife was not too offended as having been identified as a model.
Mr. DEMARAIS. She is talking looking for her contract now.
Senator BAYH. At least there was some silver lining to that unfortunate appropriation of her, of your family, which is one of the
most brazen instances of packaging copying I have heard of.
The recent action by the Administration to help protect movies
and DVDs and that sort of thing is good as far as it goes. As I mentioned in my opening comment, it covers about 4 percent of the intellectual property theft that we experience as a country, so let me
ask you: Did that action do anything for you, your workers, your
products?
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Mr. DEMARAIS. The recent action regarding the film industry?
No, but it does create some awareness. For years, we have talked
about this. I mean, the movie industry has been affected by this.
I think I first visited China 15 years ago, and the first thing I was
offered when I got off the airplane was a dollar DVD or CD tapes.
Clearly, they have been impacted by this maybe longer than we
have in our industry. Since then, it is a snowball effect. Every
product that we see out there that we make in the States and Europe is subject to be counterfeited, and we hope this is something
that we will follow through on. It is a very frustrating experience
to go out there and promote a brand and then have somebody
knock it off at half the price.
And we failed to mention not only the price is an issue, but the
quality is an issue. I do not know how many people have told me
in certain markets in Dubai or Abu Dhabi where they sell ABRO
products, they will not buy my products because certain ABRO
products are failing. I get the samples back to my lab, I found out
it is made in China or made in India. It is a double-edged sword,
one you lose a market share because of price, and second because
of quality. Some people take the attitude, I cant trust the ABRO
name, and this is something we tried to buildup over the last 40
or 50 years.
So, clearly, we want all industries protected, and it is going to
take time.
Senator BAYH. Well, and I agree. My own view is that this was
a good step. I hope it is a first step and shows a continuing dedication on the part of this Administration and future administrations
to creating a level playing field that we discussed here today. If you
read some of these articles, there is some people at least raise the
possibility because of upcoming votes on fast track and free-trade
agreements and that kind of thing, and I hope that that is not the
case, that, as we expand trade, we also expand our devotion to
making sure that intellectual property is protected. It is the only
way the global economy is going to function well, in the long run,
at least as far as I can tell, with the humility we have to bring to
our efforts to make it that way, implicit in my comments.
My last question, and I will make a closing comments for all of
us. You have been patient today and I appreciate your time in your
efforts to join us. Just very briefly, Mr. Demarais, your workers,
your company, what do they expect of our government when it
comes to this kind of thing? When you experience these sorts of
things you experience, what do they feel you then have a right to
expect for us?
Mr. DEMARAIS. It is a great question because we have been asking that question for the last 10 years because, as I said, we are
the foot soldiers out there. We are the ones going to market, not
just my employees, but my customers. The authorized ABRO dealer
that we set up in every country, he expects something, too, because
we arewe made a decision to work one man in this market, he
is buying the ABRO USA product, and all of a sudden the market
is full of non-USA ABRO products. So, what does he expect? He
cannot believe that we cannot protect the ABRO trademark, and
obviously employees feel the same way.
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What do we expect from the government? I just came back from
a trip to West Africa. I met with three or four various embassies
over there, and they said the same thing: We need to have some
teeth in our legislation. We need to have people on the ground that
can enforce. It is one thing to have these laws, but unless we can
enforcement them, unless we can work with the various countriesand every country treats intellectual property differently;
certain countries just blow the whole area offyou are not going
to make much progress there, no matter how much legislation you
have.
It is a combination of things. I think basically, though, once you
get the legislation through, you have to have a way of enforcing it
on the ground.
Senator BAYH. That is an excellent comment, and I will just end
with a little story that I think illustrates your point and part of the
challenge that we face here. Condoleezza Rice, her first trip following becoming Secretary of State, was to China, and there was
a story in the New York Times about her discussions with her
counterpart, one of the big hotels in Beijing, and part of her dialog
with this individual was to say, Look, we really need to have more
vigorous enforcement of intellectual property protection, it is not
fair, and he agreed with her comments and said that they just
passed new laws, which, in fact, they had passed new laws, and
that they would make it a priority and enforce the laws and that
sort of thing.
The reporter concluded the story by writing that when he left the
hotel where this dialog had taken place, there were some of these
kiosks out directly in front of the hotel, where for sale you could
find recent copies DVDs of the movie The Aviator before it had
actually been released in our own country, and a Chinese policemen was sort of walking along, paused in front of the kiosk, inspected the goods and continued casually along his way, suggesting
that there was some distance between the discussion at the highest
levels of government and actual enforcement at the street level
where, of course, it needs to take place.
So, perhaps some years ago we could afford to take a cavalier attitude about these things, but when it involves $250 billion annually and goes right to the heart of what perhaps will be our longterm comparative advantage, we need to be serious about this. We
will never provide a perfect solutionit is not possiblebut we
need to try to do the best we can. I think you have the right to
expect that, your workersour taxpayershave a right to expect
that to bring a sense of urgency to this problem. That is why we
had the hearing today.
I wanted to thank all of you for your time and insights, and now
it is up to us to take this hearing, along with our colleagues on the
Judiciary Committee, and translate this into action. Thank you all
very much.
The committee is adjourned.
[Whereupon, at 3:33 p.m., the hearing was adjourned.]
[Prepared statements and responses to written questions supplied for the record follow:]
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Just as important, this legislation keeps the next administration from reinventing
the wheel in January 2009. In Washington, we all know that we come up with new
ideas, and just as all the pieces are in place, we have a shift in power, and we lose
our momentum. I do not want to lose the momentum we have gained under the
STOP! initiative; rather, I want to continue and improve on it. Our democratic system is another thing that a lot of our competitors do not have to worry about. Countries like Chinasadlydo not have Congressional elections every two years and
Presidential elections every four years. They do not have to worry about losing their
momentum because when a regime comes to power, it stays in power.
While I was disappointed that we were not able to get this legislation passed during the 109th Congress, Senator Bayh and I continue to work with businesses, industry groups, and labor groups to enact it. I have also spoken with Senators Leahy
and Specter, Chairman and Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Committee,
and I understand the Judiciary Committee will hold hearings on a number of IP
items, including S. 522. I look forward to working with Members of the Judiciary
Committee on this legislation, and I appreciate the willingness of the Chair and
Ranking Member to examine this important issue. I would note that since we have
reintroduced the legislation, over thirty organizations have endorsed it, including
the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the AFL-CIO, the National Association of Manufacturers and the UAW.
These organizations recognize that Congress can no longer ignore threats to our
national economic security caused by IP theft; the cost is simply too great. Just to
give you a few astonishing statistics, intellectual property theft is costing American
business an estimated $250 billion each year and has resulted in an estimated
750,000 jobs lost. In the global economy, where competition is as high as I have ever
seen in my lifetime, we cannot allow such staggering losses to continue. We must
do a better job in combating these pirates of the 21st century.
Although I was encouraged by the USTRs announcement on Monday that it
would file WTO cases against China over its deficiencies in IP protection and enforcement, I am still concerned that the scope of the problem is not fully appreciated, even within the United States. Unfortunately, too often, many believe that
intellectual property theft is an issue limited to knock-off hand bags and pirated
DVDs and CDs. The press coverage of the USTRs announcement seems to confirm
this belief, as it largely focused on IP violations related to music and movies. Unfortunately, today, everything from medicine to airline and auto parts is counterfeited,
and these fake products end up on store shelves here in the U.S. and around the
world. These fake products are having a devastating impact on businesses both
large and small, and pose a serious risk to consumers who cannot differentiate between genuine products and counterfeit knock-offs.
In the global economy, one of the only ways America can continue competing is
through our own ingenuityit is one of our best competitive advantages. American
manufacturing is already at a disadvantage in the foreign marketplace. Our competitors have lower wages, and they are not plagued by the same stringent regulations and rising health care and energy costs. This is why we must address intellectual property theft head-on in order to protect Americas competitive edge, so we ensure that our companies continue to enjoy the fruits of their investments and innovation.
Thank you for allowing me to testify today, and I look forward to working with
Senator Bayh to pass S. 522, and I would encourage our colleagues to join us as
we move this important legislation forward.
S NAIM, PH.D.
PREPARED STATEMENT OF MOISE
EDITOR IN CHIEF, FOREIGN POLICY MAGAZINE
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It is on this last illicit trade in counterfeits that our discussion focuses today, and
on which I shall concentrate my remarks, Mr. Chairman.
Before I begin, I want to thank you, Chairman Bayh, and your colleagues on the
Subcommittee on Security and International Trade and Finance for giving me the
opportunity to come before you today. The trade in illicit goods is one of the most
pressing issues of our time and I am pleased to come before the Subcommittee. I
also want to recognize your leadership, Mr. Chairman, in tackling the problems created by the booming global trade in counterfeits, as well as your sincere interest
in seeking innovative solutions to contain this growing threat.
Today I want to make five points concerning the international trade in stolen intellectual propertyand offer one proposal for your consideration:
Firstly, the international trade in counterfeited goods is just one of many illicit
trades that have boomed in the last decade and a half. The revolutionary changes
in technology and politics that began in the early 1990s made the movement of people, goods, information, and money easier than ever before. These changes made it
cheaper for businesses, non-governmental organizations, churches, terrorists, and
countless other groups and bodies to operate globally, and with more ease than at
any time in history.
Smugglers, always internationally-minded and always quick to detect and exploit
price differences among neighboring nations, were among the first to take advantage of the opportunities created by globalization. Before the most recent wave of
globalization, traffickers were primarily limited to illegally moving goods across borders between adjacent countries. But beginning in the 1990s, they could exploit
price and cost differences globally, moving their merchandise across continents in
large volumes. Their profits, technological and managerial sophistication, and their
political influence increased accordingly.
Today, smuggling on a global scale has become one of the most potent forces reshaping the worlds political and economic landscape. Yet, in contrast to the
globalization of legitimate business, the media, or even terrorist organizations, the
globalization of smuggling and its consequences has received little attention.
When we actually look at the illegal, international trade in people, narcotics, timber, industrial waste, human organs, weapons of mass destruction, and other goods,
we see interesting similarities among them. While smuggling luxury products from
Asia to Europe may look very different than smuggling cocaine from the Andes to
Florida, and while trafficking Central American workers to California may look different than trafficking human kidneys from China to Canada, in fact many of the
economic forces, organizational arrangements, business models, and behavior of the
players are quite similar. They are not the same people or criminal networks. But
the forces that drive them and the way they are organized bear much in common.
Governments responses have also been quite similarand, in all cases, unfortunately their success has proven very elusive. There is hardly any country that can
claim major progress in containing the growth of any of these illicit trades. Therefore, a major implication of this first point is that much that can be learned from
past and current efforts aimed at curbing illicit trafficking in other markets, and
these lessons can be fruitfully applied to new initiatives aimed at limiting the trade
in stolen intellectual property.
Secondly, a common factor in all of the illicit trades I have studied is how easy
it is to overestimate governmental capabilities. One of the most common mistakes
I have found in legislation aimed at controlling illicit trades is that, too often, it assumed that governments are more capable and effective than has proven to be true.
There are many reasons for this, but the most important is that while traffickers
are global, governments are national. Governments have a hard time working outside their national jurisdictions. The natural habitat of government is inside a nations borders. The natural habitat of traffickers is in-between national bordersin
the cracks and shadows of globalization. While traffickers are perfectly at home
when operating in these interstices, governments are slowed down, indeed often paralyzed, when working within them.
In this respect, globalization has had very asymmetrical consequences for traffickers and for the public servants charged with chasing them. New technologies,
political changes, and policy reforms around the globe have had the effect of empowering criminals more than governments. In some instances, they have even demonstrably weakened governments.
This means that governments must exercise great caution when assigning new
tasks and responsibilities to agencies and departments, and their bureaucrats. Government is indispensable in the fight to curb smuggling in general and counterfeits
in particular. But in order to be effective, government needs to be selective in what
it tries to achieve. It is unrealistic to expect government to combat every aspect of
counterfeiting. History proves that it cannot. This approach will further burden al-
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ready over-stretched governments and greatly reduce their effectiveness. Priorities
are important in any policy discussion related to the fight against global counterfeiting. But, as you all know well, the hardest part of setting priorities is not deciding what to do, but rather deciding which goals, though admirable, must be cast
aside. Nowhere is this more true than in the fight against smugglers, traffickers,
and copycats.
The third point is that another frequent characteristic of anti-trafficking campaigns worldwide is that they all tend to concentrate more on constraining the supply of the smuggled goods, than on limiting their demand. This fact is well known
in the case of the United States War on Drugs where, resources spent on interdiction and eradication outstrip those aimed at curbing homegrown demand. It is also
true of efforts against illegal migration whichat least until recentlywere overwhelmingly devoted to stopping the illegal entry of foreigners while largely ignoring
their American employers.
These strategies failed, and the same risk of failure is possible in the fight against
counterfeiters. It is important to remember that the boom in pirated goods owes as
much to a growing demand as it does to a growing supply. We are talking about
literally billions of consumers around the world who are willingindeed eagerto
buy bogus facsimiles of products at a fraction of the price of the original, lawful
goods. This market of consumers is served by millions of some of the most innovative, ruthless, and managerially and technologically sophisticated entrepreneurs at
work today in the global economy.
This is a powerful marketand it is driven more by high profits than by low morals.
Approaching this fight purely from a law-enforcement or legalistic perspective will
miss the fact that we are in the presence of a gigantic market with millions of buyers and sellers and immense volumes of merchandise and money changing hands.
The implication of my third point is this: its necessary to think about incentives,
profits, value-chains, and business models when thinking about how to align this
market with the needs of society. It is important to recognize that, more often than
not, it is futile for governments to work against global markets that are this massive and powerful. It is far better to use these market forces to help achieve your
achieve goals. It is in this spirit that I will offer a proposal for your consideration
in just a moment.
Before I do so, let me make a fourth point, which is simple and brief. No country
can successfully tackle this problem acting alone. A global problem cannot be solved
with unilateral, national efforts. Curbing the growth of the global counterfeiting
market inevitably requires the effective coordination of several nations acting in
concert. This is a slow, frustrating, and often ineffective process. But no other options exist. Anyone that argues in favor of a unilateral solution is mistaken. Such
an approach will retard the adoption of more effective efforts, even as it creates the
illusion that something is being done to deal with the problem.
Lastly, counterfeits are undermining a critical foundation of global capitalism:
the intellectual property rights regime. It has now become apparent that patents,
copyrights, and other legal instruments are not affording inventors, artists and, generally speaking, the owners of intellectual property adequate protection against the
unlawful appropriation of their property. Brands, designs, formulas, software, and
content that has value is being routinely stolen, copied, and sold worldwide at a
fraction of the price charged by the original owners. Entire industries have been
devastated by piracy.
It is equally apparent that the ability of governments to enforce the legal rights
of owners of intellectual property is rapidly declining. Moreover, it is not at evident
that this decline in the effectiveness of legal instruments to protect intellectual
property can be stopped, reversed, or, in a great many cases, even slowed down. In
some instances, it is not even clear that the countries in which major counterfeiting
operations exist have governments with the political will or the institutional wherewithal to clamp down on counterfeiters. The massive scale of their operations, the
employment they generate, the profits they yield, and the widespread accomplices
that counterfeiters have in government, politics, law enforcement, the military, the
media, and the judiciary make them a formidable political and economic force. (Too
often they are also a formidable armed force.)
The implication of this point is not that governments have to abandon the fight
to ensure that intellectual property rights are protected and enforced at home and
abroad. Rather the implication is that governments need to be supported in their
efforts by the most intensive use possible of anti-copying technologies. In many industries in the near future, technology and science are going to be far more effective
at protecting intellectual property rights than legal instruments and governments.
In some industries that is already, and increasingly, the case.
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PREPARED STATEMENT OF BRAD HUTHER
SENIOR ADVISOR FOR INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ENFORCEMENT,
U.S. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
APRIL 12, 2007
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Third, to engage, on a global basis, countries that are not honoring their
international trade obligations, crack down on counterfeiters and pirates of
intellectual property, and strengthen their borders and shipping controls.
We believe our efforts, when combined with those of business organizations and
governments around the globe, will create a safer marketplace for consumers, protect the jobs of American workers and expand our competitiveness internationally.
The Intellectual Property Rights Enforcement Act provides a strong foundation for
our future collaboration. By creating an expanded and permanent interagency enforcement unit to combat IP theft, a better organized more disciplined force will
emerge. This legislation proposes the formation of the Intellectual Property Enforcement Network (IPEN) to oversee coordination among the players I have mentioned
and to ensure that a strategic plan to combat IP crimes is effectively implemented.
Agencies, while retaining their autonomous nature and continuing to perform their
essential functions and duties, would belong to a group of high-level policy makers
under a more disciplined structure that will be better prepared to counter highly
organized counterfeiting networks. For example, S. 522 would not modify the independent prosecutorial discretion of the Department of Justice or permit other agencies to unduly influence the essential operational duties the DOJ faces daily. IPEN
would, however, enhance interagency cooperation and coordination on a broad range
of strategically important activities, including intelligence sharing.
The Chamber has actively supported the establishment of regional frameworks to
increase cooperation on enforcement of intellectual property rights among our most
important trading partners. Here are just a few relevant examples of new enforcement efforts that are being pursued in ways that we believe are complementary to
the global Intellectual Property Enforcement Network which you and Senator
Voinovich have proposed in S. 522:
The EU-US Action Strategy for the Enforcement of Intellectual Property
Rights includes fifteen bilateral, multilateral and public-private action
strategies, many of which involve the sharing of enforcement intelligence
with relevant law enforcement authorities;
The Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America contains similar
action items, most notably a goal to develop a network of enforcement professionals among the governments of Canada, Mexico and the United States
to jointly collaborate on enforcement against transnational counterfeiting
and piracy. The three governments are currently considering ways of identifying authorized law enforcement officials to conduct domestic criminal investigations and prosecutions of counterfeiters and pirates and enhancing
domestic industry/government cooperation and information sharing; and
At the G8 Leaders Summit in St. Petersburg last year, a comprehensive IP
enforcement strategy was announced, which included an agreement
. . . on a plan to establish a formal IP law enforcement infrastructure
within the G8 . . . for the pursuit of joint law enforcement operations targeted at IP crimes.
IPEN would provide an excellent platform with which the U.S. private sector can
interact to express its concerns and provide intelligence on criminal activity. The
business community has a clear role to play by contributing its expertise and resources to assist the government in taking on all aspects of counterfeiting, including
those relating to technical assistance and capacity building. Company-financed investigations, which complement the work of law enforcement officials, will have
grater leveraged benefits via IPEN as well. Through the promotion of greater private sector collaboration and enhanced channels of communication, we believe IPEN
will have a substantially more efficient and increased capacity to obtain and distribute intelligence on Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) crimes simultaneously to
all relevant agencies.
Accordingly, we believe the Intellectual Property Rights Enforcement Act articulates a clear and compelling need for greater international enforcement cooperation
in battling IP crimes. IPR crime adversely affects countries that are our potential
trading partners. While all recent Free Trade Agreements contain substantive sections regarding intellectual property rights protection and enforcement, without
greater international IPR enforcement activities the investment climate and trading
environment in these countries will be hampered. The Intellectual Property Rights
Enforcement Act would be invaluable in creating a framework that rewards countries for having legal regimes that enforce IP laws, shut down piracy operations, arrest and prosecute those who commit IP crimes, and for having officials with the
authority to inspect, seize and destroy counterfeit goods at ports of entry.
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On June 14, 2005, I testified before the Senate Subcommittee on Oversight of
Government Management, The Federal Workforce and the District of Columbia regarding the STOP! initiative. The Chambers view then was that STOP! provided
an excellent example of interagency collaboration and offered considerable promise
in the fight against IP theft. We recommended, however, that provisions of the Government Performance and Results Act, especially those relating to establishing performance indicators and the means for validating actual versus planned achievement of them, are rigorously applied to measure the Administrations progress. Essential to the proper functioning of any interagency program is a requirement for
increased oversight, including involving stakeholders in advising the Congress and
the administration in the process of developing appropriate metrics for the measurement of success. By establishing performance indicators and the means for validating actual versus planned achievements, and linking them to the resources necessary for success, IPEN should achieve even greater advances in the future. We
are pleased to see that S. 522 incorporates these important concepts.
The Chamber understands how important this battle is and stands ready to support the enactment and implementation of this legislation.
Thank you, Chairman Bayh, for focusing on a dangerous and very real threat to
our economy, jobs for our citizens, and the holders of intellectual property rights.
I appreciate the opportunity to provide testimony and will be happy to respond to
any questions you may have.
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I immediately contacted the show officials and advised them that this company
was illegally selling our ABRO products as we own the ABRO trademark. After I
substantiated the fact that we hold the official ABRO trademark registration in
China, the show officials agreed to raid the booth with me and I was stunned
when the General Manager of the Chinese company produced documentation that
showed they had the rights to the trademark in China. Later it was discovered this
documentation was an application and not the actual trademark itself. There was
obviously uncertainty at that point at the show until I picked up a sample of our
ABRO Epoxy that Hunan Magic was displaying at their booth. Our ABRO Epoxy
is a product that I personally developed 20 years ago. At that time, we were not
doing $100 Million a year in sales and we were somewhat low budget and I had
taken a picture of my wife applying epoxy to our bicycle and then put this photo
on a blister card. The product has become one of our most popular selling ABRO
products with millions of units being sold annually. I immediately asked the General Manager of Hunan Magic who the lady was on his ABRO Epoxy card and he
told the show officials it was some western model. I reached in my wallet and
pulled out a picture of my wife which finally convinced the show authorities we actually owned the trademark and they closed down the booth and Hunan Magic was
cited for using our ABRO trademark illegally. We thought the matter was settled
until the next trade show when Hunan Magic changed the packaging slightly by deleting the face of my wife and replacing it with a face of an Asian woman but keeping everything else the same including our ABRO name. This story was the subject
of a cover story article in The Wall Street Journal in November 2004 and we
thought the notoriety would convince the Chinese government to do something
about controlling this renegade Chinese manufacturer. Unfortunately, their illegal
activity has become even more blatant as Hunan Magic is now selling the ABRO
brand of products in all of our major markets and their General Manager has publicly stated that his ABRO brand is one of the most successful brands they have
ever introduced.
Since the Chinese government will not enforce intellectual property laws to protect our ABRO name, we are forced to take legal action in the various markets
where these counterfeit products are being sold. For the past several years, we have
spent most of our time traveling overseas not actively marketing our ABRO products as we should be but basically working with in-country attorneys and local police and Custom officials to try to seize and destroy these counterfeit products once
they enter the foreign country. Last month, I took a business trip to West Africa
and in Cameroon successfully led raids against wholesale shops who were selling
counterfeit ABRO products. Thousands of cartons of counterfeit ABRO products
were seized and will be eventually destroyed. I did hold meetings with the Commercial Attaches at U.S. Embassies in Nigeria, Ghana and Cameroon and was told by
all of the Embassy personnel that intellectual property violations are growing rapidly in their respective markets and they wish they had more teeth to try to enforce intellectual property laws.
That is why we are thrilled by the new Intellectual Property Rights Enforcement
Act that is now being introduced in the Senate by Senator George Voinovich and
Senator Bayh. We all know about the War on Terror that is being fought globally
but in the business community we look at intellectual property violations as a war
on economic terrorism as these companies who are counterfeiting are stealing patents, trademarks, ideas and designs from American companies. We are all aware
this illicit activity is costing U.S. companies sales, profits and jobs.
It was encouraging to note that recently the U.S. Government announced it will
ask the World Trade Organization to organize meetings to address deficiencies in
Chinas protection of intellectual property rights on books, music, videos and movies.
However, there is no mention of many other U.S. products that are being counterfeited including automotive parts and accessories. We hope that the U.S. Government will address deficiencies in all areas of intellectual property violations. When
the U.S. agreed to grant China WTO status, China certainly received tremendous
trade benefits which is evident by all of the Chinese goods that are sold in the U.S.
However, with WTO benefits come WTO obligations and the U.S. Government must
insist that the Chinese government live up to these obligations as counterfeit merchandise from China is responsible for the loss of more than 750,000 American jobs.
We feel very passionate about the new Intellectual Property Rights Enforcement
Act as we deal with counterfeit issues on a daily basis and this is not just a growing
trade problem for ABRO Industries but a problem all USA manufacturers face internationally. The past five years have been most frustrating as ABROs biggest competitor is not STP, General Electric, Bondo, ITW or some other well known automotive chemical manufacturer but our biggest competitor has become ABRO products from China which is clearly not how our American dream to ABROnize the
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world was expected to play out. It was mentioned in the The Wall Street Journal
article in November 2004 that the intellectual property problem we are facing in
China is a classic David vs. Goliath story. The 23 people at ABRO Industries can
only do so much against this economic super power. We only ask that the U.S. Government treat the intellectual property matter more vigorously and pass legislation
that will correct these trade injustices and then provide various agencies overseas
the effective muscle to enforce this new trade legislation.
Thank you for giving me the opportunity to testify today and allow me to vent
some of my personal past frustrations on this matter. We continue to fight the battle in the overseas sales trenches every daybut we do need some help from the
generals back here in Washington. This war on economic terrorism can be won but
it is going to take a concentrated effort by everyone here in Washington to force
China to comply with their WTO obligations which requires this economic super
power to enforce intellectual property laws in their own country.
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RESPONSE TO WRITTEN QUESTIONS OF SENATOR BAYH
S NAIM
FROM MOISE
Q.1. On page 255 of your book, Illicit, you assert that a smart multilateral approach to combating illicit trade has to be selective. You
cite the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), the anti-money laundering initiative, as a good model for multilateral enforcement cooperation. In referencing FATF, you highlight the organizations selectivity as the key to its success. Countries join only if they are
able to meet a list of qualifications, and consequently not every
country is invited to join. Rather, the key to FATFs success is mutual trust, which can only be generated by establishing standards
as part of a careful, deliberate process.
Regarding intellectual property protection, the United States
should continue to actively engage China, India, Brazil, and other
sources of counterfeit products through bilateral and multilateral
efforts. However, do you agree that an effective international enforcement mechanism must be limited to countries that can meet
high standards, and who have demonstrated a commitment to enforcement, even if China, India, and Brazil would not be ready to
initially participate in such an arrangement?
A.1. I do agree that the FATF model has much to offer and that
its essential structure and approach should be replicated as much
as possible in multilateral efforts to combat counterfeiting. I also
agree thatas stated in your questionthe United States should
continue to also actively engage countries that are major producers
of counterfeited products. It is possible that the solution lies in creating a sequential process whereby an initial core group of countries [major counterfeit consuming countries] can later be enlarged
to include others [major counterfeit producing countries]. It is important to note that many industrialized countries where most
companies which are victims of counterfeiting are headquartered
are, at the same time, home to the largest consumer population of
counterfeited products.
With time, and after consolidating its operations, this initial
FATF-like structure can then be enlarged to also include countries
that are the sources of these counterfeits. In any case, creating a
FATF-like structure to combat counterfeiting is, in my mind, a welcome step. I stand ready to elaborate on these and other points
that the Subcommittee may have.
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