Is China Innovative?
I tapped into an interesting discussion on LinkedIn. Chris Gelken, who is host and co-producer of Today, a live news magazine, asked whether China is an innovative society.
Personally, I find the development of China to be both fascinating and a bit frightening seen from a Western perspective. Based on several visit, my take is that if China avoids too many financial bubbles, then the drive and ambition of the Chinese people to climb the value chain ladder will turn it into an innovation hotspot sooner than many think.
There are many great comments in the discussion and I have inserted snippets from a couple of them below. Check out the rest for yourself: Is China an Innovative Society?
Zhiyun Chen, Vice President at Pixelligent
I think as indivduals Chinese are very creative. It is result of strong natural selection by firece competetion in a closed society. The problem, though, is Chinese society still lacks mechnisms to channel the creativity of individuals into constructive innovations.
Edward Eng, Copywriter at Getchee
Rather than ask if China is innovate or not, people should focus on how China needs to improve its global marketing skills. The reason why many people think China isn’t innovate is because no one knows what they are doing in China. People and businesses in China have great ideas and products but sometimes they just don’t know how to effectively market them to the global consumer market. This is where China needs to strengthen its innovative juices.
John Walmsley, MD at Scot Lift Systems
They have the ideal situation for innovation as the Universities concentrate on designing and developing products which will meet a market need and not play around learning things which do not relate to Industry and Commerce. Where there is a gap is in Product design where they seem to lack the skills in making their products look modern and appealing. If they get that right then look out World.
Stephen DeKuyper, Managing Principal at CresaPartners
My experience tells me an overwhelming “no”. Good at copying, good at driving costs down, but not innovative. I would be interested in seeing how many patents are applied for out of China. I guess it would be very low. I think with the size of the population, it will go up, but on a per capita basis, I think it will remain low. This does not equate to being smart or not. I just don’t think there is an environment for innovation.
Bill Dodson, Principal at TrendsAsia
China excels at innovation, but not disruptive Innovation. “Small i” innovation is about patching and work-arounds. “Big I” Innovation is about changing the course of markets and even of societies. Chinese culture and history have always been supportive of “small i” innovation, due to the capricious nature of local government policies and decisions; and due to dramatic turns of events – revolts, revolutions, banditry, dynastic dissolution – that quickly destroy the fruits of labor. Hence, the tendency of so many constructions and creations in Chinese society to be just “good enough”; after all, who knows how long such works will be able to stand?

Stefan, thanks for the mention. I agree with you that China will soon be an innovation hotspot. It’s going to be an exciting time. =)
===================
Edward Eng
getchee Staff Writer
http://blog.getchee.com
http://www.getchee.com
===================
My observations on China so far is that they are focusing on making quick bucks and using their population size to its advantage – cheap labor and hence phase one is all about being a production based economy.
Now phase two has step in where they will do anything to get FREE technological knowhow. Anyone interested in doing business in China will have to release the rights of technology to China. Simply put, they are great copycats and hungry for anything that make them control the world- Energy, resources etc.
China presently does have a high number of patents but that is only because they patent almost anything just to get them looking like they are innovators. Whereas, Japan patents which still ranks high is really about cutting edge technology and innovations. The problem with Japan is that most of these people with patents has no idea how to market them to the world. I personally know many of these innovators and they are just sitting on their patents that could change the world!!!!
China is NOT at the stage of the game to play innovators, their research centers currently are mostly great at taking someone’s elses technology, strip them apart and finding ways to copy and claim it as theirs.
Right now the thinking is why spend money on research and innovation when you can copy FREELY in China???? and make fast bucks on someone’s years of R&D?