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Early in Margaret Mitchell's war-time classic Gone with
the Wind, southern aristocrats bar-b-queuing on Wilkes' plantation
debate how long it will take them to "whip the Yankees."
"One Southerner can lick twenty Yankees," proclaims one
guest, because "Gentlemen can always fight better than rattle."
For the first of several times, Captain Rhett Butler shows his
contrarian streak by observing "there's not a cannon factory
in the whole South.. [while the North has] factories, shipyards,
coalmines. and a fleet." His point, made by Ms. Mitchell with
76 years of hindsight, was that in 1860 the strength of nations
depended far less upon the bravery and training of gentlemen-soldiers
and far more on manufacturing, resource abundance and transportation
capabilities.
Having started in England 50 years prior, the Industrial Revolution
was well under way. The winners would be those nations with access
to critical materials, advanced production capacity and market-based
economies. Over the next century, railroads and coal expanded to
airports and oil, but the story of the industrial era remained largely
dominated by material resources and production infrastructure. Then,
during the second half of the 20th Century, another trend began
emerging, and by century's end a new, information age was unfolding.
Ladies and gentlemen, knowledge - ideas and the people who generate
them - is the new coin of the realm, with innovative capacity the
key driver of future economic growth, productivity gains and wealth
creation.
Thanks very much for inviting me to join you today. Your work is
essential to expanding America's innovative capacity. Our ability
to create and protect intellectual property and our education system
will determine our success in the 21st Century. I am here in the
Valley this week because the Bush Administration recognizes the
singular importance of our technology sector and the unique contributions
it makes to our economy, homeland defense and the global war against
terror. We also know that the broader recovery under way elsewhere
in our economy is not yet being felt out here. Even worse, as you
- our engine of future economic growth - remain stalled, the tech
sector is under assault in Washington by those who seek to force
stock option expensing, roll-back securities litigation reforms,
and prevent freer trade. The Bush Administration stands squarely
with the technology community on these issues. Within the next month
I expect the Commerce Secretary, our Under Secretary for Technology,
and the Director of the Patent and Trademark Office to also visit
with leaders in the Valley and huddle on ways we might help restore
growth.
Today I'd like to offer a perspective on why knowledge is now "king,"
the implications of the innovation age for America's global competitiveness,
and the Bush Administration's high tech agenda. I'll highlight a
few of the IPR issues on my radar screen and then I hope I might
hear from you about the issues you believe most important.
WHY KNOWLEDGE IS KING
The wealth of nations is indeed changing. And while it may still
take some time before the hydrogen economy replaces oil, the impact
of innovation and technology on our society is already profound
and unmistakable. Just look at the out-sized impacts of information
industries.
- The information technology sector accounts for just 7% of all
businesses in our economy, yet between 1996 and 2000 it drove 28%
of the overall US real economic growth, generated 2/3rds of the
remarkable new productivity growth, (growth that persists today),
and created jobs at twice the pace of other sectors, jobs that paid
twice as much on average (Digital Economy 2001, Economic & Statistics
Administration, US Dept. of Commerce).
- Advances in health care technologies and services have increased
life expectancies, resulting in annual net gains of about $2.4 trillion
to our economy (Congressional Joint Economic Committee).
- We have seen how new bio-agriculture technologies can reduce hunger
around the world, increasing crop-yields by up to 25% and reducing
reliance on herbicides and pesticides, which is good for our health
and good for our environment. Foreign Affairs reported in April
2002 that Kenyan farmers were harvesting their first crop of sweet
potatoes genetically engineered for resistance to an aphid-borne
disease that previously had killed up to 80% of their crop.
- Innovations are helping us secure our homeland by detecting and
preventing attacks. New technologies are promising ever-greater
energy-efficiencies and, of course, education technologies and applications
point to radical improvements in how we learn. The good news and
bad news here is that we've only tapped 1% of the potential for
new technologies to transform the learning process for teachers
and students of all ages.
Emerging technologies promise even greater economic impact and
disruption. For example, the National Science Foundation predicts
the market for nanotechnology products and services will reach over
$1 trillion by 2015 in the United States alone. Leading experts
gathered by NSF predicted nanotech's impact will be at least as
significant as antibiotics, the integrated circuit and man-made
polymers were in the 20th century. From genomics to quantum computing,
from pervasive networks to proteomics, there will be more change
in the next 30 years than we saw over the last 100.
THE GOOD NEWS AND BAD NEWS FOR U.S. COMPETITIVENESS
Now the growing importance of knowledge and innovation presents
both good news and bad news for the United States relative to our
global competitors. On the one hand, by almost any measure, America
is the most innovative nation on earth.
- We generate the most patents per capita. According to Harvard
Business School professor Juan Enriquez, it takes about 3,000 Americans
to generate one U.S. patent, compared to 4,000 Japanese, 6,000 Taiwanese,
1.2 million Mexicans, 1.8 million Brazilians, 10 million Chinese
and 21 million Indonesians.
- We conduct more research and development than any other nation.
The United States funds 44% of the total worldwide investment in
R & D - equal to the combined total of Japan, the United Kingdom,
Canada, France, Germany and Italy (National Science Board's 2002
S&E indicators).
- American scientific output is greater, as measured by scientific
publications per million population, than the EU and Japan (708
to 613 and 498 respectively) (1999 data compiled by the EU).
- Our labs and universities remain a more attractive destination
for the best and brightest young minds in the world. 85% of the
PhDs who come here from China remain in the U.S. because it's a
better place to live and do business. By contrast, many European
Union nations remain challenged when trying to attract top scientists
and students from places such as India and China. As the Wall Street
Journal recently observed, a German government web site highlighted
Europeans' challenge here quite nicely, when it attempted to lure
foreign researchers by noting: "Germany, as the statistics
show, is no more xenophobic than other European countries."
Our culture rewards risk, encourages entrepreneurship, celebrates
success and upholds the rule of law more than any other.
And of most significance to us today, Americans have enjoyed the
most rational, predictable and transparent framework for intellectual
property rights in the world, encouraging investment and incenting
innovation.
BUT notwithstanding our advantages and current leadership, the
rest of the world is not blind to the importance of innovative capacity
in the 21st century, and they're not standing still. America's global
competitiveness faces pressure on multiple fronts as technology-driven
changes come faster, disruptions cut deeper, technologies fuse and
wealth becomes ever more mobile. Here are four of the biggest challenges
we face:
Building the Best and Brightest, instead of just importing. Within
a generation we will need a far more science-literate, technology-savvy
society than we have today. Yet American students at the K-12 level
continue to lag behind their international counterparts in math
and science learning.
- U.S. eighth graders ranked 19th out of 38 nations in math and
18th in science in the 1999 Third International Math & Science
Study Repeat.
- The World Competitiveness Yearbook ranks the U.S. 24th out of
45 nations in science education and 18th in "attractiveness
of S&T to youth."
- Other nations are aggressively acting to stem their own brain
drains and recruit their citizens trained in the U.S. back to their
native countries, and many such as Taiwan are succeeding.
What happens if we neither produce nor attract and retain the best
and brightest scientists and technology students?
- Funding the Future. Americans enjoy and expect a very generous
entitlement system. Retirees are living longer and receiving far
more in Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid benefits than they
ever paid into the system. According to Dan Crippen of the Congressional
budget office, in 2001, these entitlement programs accounted for
26% of non-interest federal spending; but in 2030, they could account
for up to 70%. Things we can afford for our parents may well become
too expensive for our children to pay for us. How will future cash
crunches impact federal support for education, infrastructure and
research and development?
- Sharing the Wealth. Three billion people on our planet live on
less than $2 per day, and half the world has never made a telephone
call. Globalization and increased connectivity ensure that the most
impoverished see how the other half lives, and extraordinary disparities
may breed discontent and hostility. As we have seen with AIDS drugs
in Africa, there will be great pressures on intellectual property
owners to share the wealth or lose control over their innovations.
New technologies and discoveries will only add to the pressures
on IP and global security. How will we address these pressures while
maintaining the incentives critically needed to ensure future innovations
get funded?
- Having Wisdom Keep Pace With Intelligence. We have not yet developed
systems to assess the social implications and ethical consequences
of new technologies. I'll give you an example. Most people would
probably support a genetic screen that could ensure our offspring
will be free of genetic defects before they are conceived. But what
if parents also wish to pre-select gender? Eye-color? Height? Intelligence?
The Washington Post recently reported on a stud bull named Elevation
who lived 60 miles west of Washington (June 30, 2002). Elevation's
genes were so good they used him to sire 80,000 daughters and at
least 2.3 million granddaughters. Named Bull of the Century, it
is estimated that about 15% of the DNA in today's US dairy cows
came from this one animal. If we can find the gene that made Albert
Einstein so smart, should we let people similarly splice it into
our own future generations?
Perhaps most significantly, we face the healthy but daunting challenge
of global competition that keeps getting better. Those who believe
in the notion of permanent superpowers would be wise to remember
that the sun never set on the British Empire, and all roads used
to lead to Rome. The battle for leadership in the Innovation Age
is a many-horse race, and other nations and regions are also working
to improve their own innovation systems. While the United States
accounts for 44% of worldwide R&D today, in 1970 we accounted
for 70% (Alliance for Science & Technology Research in America).
The EU is racing to match our investments in nanotech, while Asian
nations have collectively pulled ahead. The world is not standing
still
THE BUSH HIGH TECH AGENDA
With intellectual output playing such a critical role in our economy,
society and global competitiveness, the Bush Administration is pursuing
a high tech agenda that seeks to maximize the creation, protection
and commercialization of intellectual property. Specifically, our
policies promote innovation, support entrepreneurship, improve infrastructure
and empower people.
To promote innovation, the President has proposed aggressive investments
in research & development. Our 2002 budget crossed the $100
billion mark for the first time (at $103B), and we have proposed
$112 billion for 2003 - the largest R&D commitment in our nation's
history. We're also asking Congress to make the R&E tax credit
permanent, to reflect the importance of private investments in research,
which are twice as large as government's. We're seeking to strengthen
intellectual property protection - both by devoting far more resources
to the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office (21% more in 2003), cracking
down on illegal piracy here at home, and by enforcing IPR aggressively
around the world. Additionally, the President has asked Congress
to devote another $200 million to improving math and science teaching
at the K-12 level, working with regional teacher colleges and the
NSF to improve math & science curricula.
To support entrepreneurs, the Bush Administration passed a bipartisan
tax cut that many experts credit with moderating the recession of
2001, and we championed an economic stimulus package that accelerated
depreciation schedules for businesses that invest in capital equipment
for the next 3 years - the #1 request from the tech sector. We continue
to push an aggressive free trade agenda around the world, finally
prevailing upon Congress - including many alleged high tech Members
who fought against us every step of the way - to extend Trade Promotion
Authority to this Administration, so we can negotiate with one voice
instead of 101. We're working through the WTO to overcome the anti-globalization
inertia we inherited from Seattle, to reduce barriers to trade (especially
in services) and to increase international cooperation in protecting
intellectual property. Additionally, we're asking Congress to reform
the Export Administration Act to make it less burdensome for our
technology companies to export new tech equipment consistent with
national security concerns. And the President is moving aggressively
to improve the transparency and reliability of corporate accounting
and governance following the excesses of the 1990s. We're aiming
to put those who broke the law in jail, plug the accounting loopholes
that reduced market transparency, and reassure investors, while
still allowing markets forces to prevail and ensuring our system
continues to allow and reward risk.
To improve our innovation infrastructure, the President's technology
priorities include hardening the nation's defenses, especially critical
infrastructure protection and cyber security; implementing a national
energy plan that uses technology to improve energy efficiency while
expanding domestic capacities; aggressively promoting the deployment
and usage of high-speed Internet (broadband) networks, both on the
supply and demand sides; and working to ensure we manage the radio
spectrum most effectively - for example, just last week we identified
90MHz of government spectrum for transfer to the private sector
for 3G services.
Lastly, to empower people, the President made e-government a top
tier priority for the Administration, leveraging unprecedented federal
investments in IT - $52 billion proposed for 2003, a 15% increase
- to provide more services to citizens and operate government more
efficiently. Of greatest importance to this President may be the
bipartisan efforts to improve our nation's education system, epitomized
by the No Child Left Behind Act signed last year. To remain globally
competitive - both as a tech-led economy and as the most-inclusive
opportunity society - we must place education first, and that's
what our President is doing.
IP ISSUES AT THE OFFICE OF TECHNOLOGY POLICY
In pursuit of this agenda, my office likewise focuses on policies
to promote innovation, support entrepreneurs, improve infrastructure
and empower people. We're working on several intellectual property
questions of interest to many of you including:
TECH TRANSFER. By statute, our office has the federal government
lead on examining, reporting on and recommending improvements to
the 1980 Bayh-Dole and Stevenson-Wydler Acts among others. We coordinate
federal technology transfer policy through an interagency working
group. These policies and laws establish the intellectual property
regime governing technologies developed with federal funding, such
as much university IP and inventions at our government labs. These
laws have helped distinguish America from other nations with large
federal investments in R&D by setting a rational, predictable
and consistent framework for determining IP control and ownership
that encouraged commercialization. With some urging assertion of
greater federal rights over such IP (e.g. seeking recoupment) and
others recommending less federal control (e.g. surrendering march-in
rights), we're trying to ensure balanced rules ensure ideas move
from concept to commerce.
DRM. We're working with NIST and the PTO to examine questions of
digital content and rights management as part of our effort to better
encourage the deployment and usage of high-speed Internet. Through
two expert roundtables we have found that concerns over intellectual
property protection (and business models) are keeping valuable content
off-line, especially games, music and video. We continue to work
with information technology innovators, content creators and consumer
advocates, hoping to identify and remove barriers to market-based
solutions so these potentially "killer" consumer broadband
applications can get off of the sidelines and into our homes.
The Office of Technology Policy also interacts with policy makers
across the country and around the world, trying to identify and
promote policies that support innovation and tech-led economic development.
We continue to stress to our international counterparts that their
protection of intellectual property rights is a core driver of sustainable
growth and a prerequisite for attracting foreign investment. Exporting
American IPR policies and practices offers a win-win - supporting
our businesses and protecting our technology while helping people
around the world improve their own economies and innovative capacity.
* * * * *
If innovation and entrepreneurship profoundly shaped the 20th century,
they will define the 21st. Knowledge development and commercialization
are the new drivers of economic growth, both in the U.S. and around
the world. Our ability to create new innovations and harness their
power will directly impact our national prosperity, security and
global influence.
I'd like to conclude by offering three principles to guide our
efforts going forward. First, we must not forget that innovation
is the key to future prosperity. Technology can enable us to improve
our lives and make the world a safer, more abundant, and more equitable
place. Yet many will fear technology and the disruptive changes
it brings, while others will try to harness its extraordinary power
for extraordinary evil. As leaders in government and industry, we
must work to promote greater public understanding of, appreciation
for, and widespread access to technology. We need to help our citizens
understand these changes and educate them to take advantage of them,
relying on sound science and rational analysis to use technology
to advance the human condition.
Second, intellectual property creation and protection are the keys
to unleashing our innovative potential. We must encourage entrepreneurship,
reward risk, and maintain the incentives that are so critical to
the creative process of bringing ideas from concept to commerce.
Last, we need to all remember the power of Metcalf's law. This
principle states that the value of a network increases exponentially
as more people connect. While there is zero value having the only
telephone on Earth - after all there's no one to call - going from
100 to 1000 users increases the value of the network by more than
a factor of 10. As we look to solve the technology policy challenges
before us, we must join together with leaders around the world,
so the rising tide of innovation lifts all boats. Personally I believe
globalization - freer exchanges of people, ideas and goods - can
be practiced intelligently and for the benefit of all. We will all
be better off - as businesses, as nations and as citizens of the
world - when 6 billion people are online, instead of the 500 million
who have logged on so far.
Once again I appreciate your having me here and I congratulate
all of you for your commitment and efforts to strengthen the development
and protection of American intellectual assets. Your work is critical
to our economic strength and long-term prosperity, and we look forward
to working with you to ensure our nation remains the leader in technology
and innovation. Our future depends on our success. Thank you.
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