scholarly journals Legal means of protecting the rights to the results of intellectual activities in healthcare in international business

Author(s):  
O. V. Sushkova

The author analyzes the legal means of protecting the rights to the results of intellectual activity through the TRIPS agreement and its impact on the development of international business in the field of healthcare. Attention is paid to the national patent policies of different legal orders, exploring the theoretical differences in the policies of different countries. It also addresses key domestic implementation policy issues as the new rules move from the international to the national level. Finally, it examines the implications of TRIPS for managing innovation in ICT-based industries, including pharmaceuticals, and where ICT has enabled global value chains, where the speed and distributed nature of innovation makes intellectual outcomes both less efficient and more necessary

Author(s):  
Robert Grosse ◽  
Klaus E. Meyer

This chapter raised two issues as a basis for structuring our thinking about international business in emerging markets. First, the question is raised regarding whether new theory is needed to study IB in emerging markets, or if existing theories can be extended to cover these geographic and institutional environments adequately. Second, the chapter presents the perspective of emerging markets fitting into global value chains, demonstrating how they fit into both supply chains and demand patterns. So, thinking about strategies for operating a foreign MNE in an emerging market and fitting an EM firm into an international network are both enhanced by looking at the firm(s) in the context of global value chains.


2017 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 113-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vitaliy Omelyanenko

Abstract The article deals with basic characteristics and fundamentals of innovation management of global value chains and considerations on the example of space industry based on the factor of interaction in the creation of new products in global value chains. General context of global value chains as a factor of strategy development and characteristics and factors of global value chains in space industry is considered. Mechanism of the development of space engineering as global industry at the national level is proposed. The author proposes to consider four groups of level of characteristics of the competitiveness of technological component for integration into the global value chain of space industry projects.


Author(s):  
Correa Carlos Maria

This chapter explores the issue of patentability. Article 27.1 of the Trade-related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) Agreement stipulates that ‘patents shall be available for any inventions’. As with most patent laws in the world, the Agreement does not define what an invention is. The plain wording of Article 27.1 suggests that Members have been left room to define ‘invention’ within their legal systems, in good faith, subject only to the application of the method of interpretation set out by the Vienna Convention. However, the interpretation of the obligation to patent ‘any inventions’ raises many important policy issues, such as the extent to which Members are bound to confer patents over discoveries, particularly over substances found in nature such as genes. Although Members can adopt a more expansive concept at the national level, they are not obliged to grant patents to what is not ordinarily considered an ‘invention’. Thus, they are not obliged to grant patents over genes.


2017 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 174-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger Strange ◽  
Antonella Zucchella

Purpose This paper aims to provide an assessment of how the widespread adoption of new digital technologies (i.e. the Internet of things, big data and analytics, robotic systems and additive manufacturing) might affect the location and organisation of activities within global value chains (GVCs). Design/methodology/approach The approach in this paper is to review various sources about the potential adoption and impact of the new digital technologies (commonly known collectively as Industry 4.0), to contrast these technologies with existing technologies, and to consider how the new technologies might lead to new configurations involving suppliers, firms and customers. Findings The authors report that the new digital technologies have considerable potential to disrupt how and where activities are located and organised within GVCs), and who captures the value-added within those chains. They also report that Industry 4.0 is still in its infancy, but that its effects are already having an impact upon the nature of competition and corporate strategies in many industries. Social/implications In particular, the authors draw attention to the potential cyber-risks and implications for the privacy of individuals, and hence, the need for regulation. Originality/value This is the first published paper to consider the likely separate and joint impacts of the new digital technologies on the practice and theory of international business.


2017 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 244-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
Graham Hollinshead

Purpose This paper aims to explore the micro-political complexities of operating over institutional distance in a modern international enterprise. The focal sector of the study is the pharmaceutical industry, which, in its latest phase of global development, has engaged in “internal sourcing” of research and development (R&D) talent from China. This paper contributes to emergent “socio-political” theorization in international business through revealing complex forms of workplace segmentation and conflictual forms of practice at micro-organizational level. Design/methodology/approach The author of this paper and a UK-based research associate visited the Shanghai-based R&D facility of a major Western owned pharmaceutical concern to carry out interviews with key managers, expatriates and scientists to “hear their stories”. Access was gained to the research site through insider contacts. Findings It was discovered that, in the context of an enterprise intent on innovation, motivational logics themselves emanate from the embedded positions of diverse organizational actors, in turn bringing to the fore issues of power, resistance, ethnicity and language. Research limitations/implications Generalizations from a single case study may have limited significance. However, the unique case setting provides the scope for a novel contribution to the field of international business by examining contradictory and asymmetrical factors in the social construction of a Global Value Chain extending from West to East to source emergent local talent. Practical implications The case offers the possibility for managerial learning in the areas of working across cultures, managing expatriation, dealing with linguistic and etymological differences and formulating international business strategy (integration or differentiation in the MNC). The study highlights the significance of critical realist perspectives in fostering reflexive behaviours of actors in multilayered and complex micro-environments. Social implications The work has significance concerning the devolution of both managerial and medical responsibilities to local agents in China. This is a vital social factor in the emerging economy context. The work also casts light on social and personal issues confronting international managerial and scientific migrants. Originality/value To date, the phenomena of Global Value Chains have been approached in a relatively transactional and economistic fashion. The paper shed light on GVCs as humanistic and political phenomena. A relatively new departure of the study is to demonstrate that workplace actors in modern and modularized industrial enterprises located in the emerging economy setting respond to environmental volatility through engaging in variant and conflictual forms of institutional entrepreneurship.


2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (Special Issue) ◽  
pp. 607-627
Author(s):  
John Humphrey ◽  
Emanuela Todeva ◽  
Eduardo Armando ◽  
Ernesto Giglio

2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans-Ulrich Brautzsch ◽  
Oliver Holtemöller

AbstractWe use the World Input–Output Database (WIOD) combined with regional sectoral employment data to estimate the potential regional employment effects of international trade barriers. We study the case of a no-deal Brexit in which imports to the United Kingdom (UK) from the European Union (EU) would be subject to tariffs and non-tariff trade costs. First, we derive the decline in UK final goods imports from the EU from industry-specific international trade elasticities, tariffs and non-tariff trade costs. Using input–output analysis, we estimate the potential output and employment effects for 56 industries and 43 countries on the national level. The absolute effects would be largest in big EU countries which have close trade relationships with the UK, such as Germany and France. However, there would also be large countries outside the EU which would be heavily affected via global value chains, such as China, for example. The relative effects (in percent of total employment) would be largest in Ireland followed by Belgium. In a second step, we split up the national effects on the NUTS-2 level for EU member states and additionally on the county (NUTS-3) level for Germany. The share of affected workers varies between 0.03% and 3.4% among European NUTS-2 regions and between 0.15% and 0.4% among German counties. A general result is that indirect effects via global value chains, i.e., trade in intermediate inputs, are more important than direct effects via final demand.


Author(s):  
Xubei Luo ◽  
Gary Gereffi

This chapter examines the opportunities and challenges brought about by global value chains (GVCs). It first considers how GVCs are (re)shaping geography and transforming the global economy before discussing some of the main risks and opportunities that firms and people face as they participate in GVCs, with a focus on special challenges from the perspective of developing countries. Participation in GVCs creates new opportunities for firms to profit, provides employment and income sources for people, and widens their spectrum of consumption and investment. However, the economic gains of participating in GVCs do not automatically translate into good jobs or stable employment in both developed and developing countries. The extent to which firms and workers can benefit from participation in GVCs depends on their competitiveness. The chapter concludes with an analysis of some policy issues, such as government support for infrastructure improvements to smooth the functioning of GVCs.


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