Tag Archives: Customs
“Fashions fade, Style is eternal”
Today’s post has been kindly drafted for us in the offices of De Tullio & Partners, Intellectual Property Attorneys, Bari, Italy.
Managing partner and friend to the Helpdesk Mr Elio De Tullio, together with his associate, Mr Giacomo Bucciarelli, have put down in writing what they have experienced to be the main problems faced by SMEs in the fashion industry, along with their top tips on how to adequately protect and enforce their rights in China.
China Fashion: IPR in Images
IPR and the Fashion Industry in China
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The fashion industry encompasses the design, manufacturing, distribution, retailing, marketing and promotion of clothing, footwear and accessories and is worth billions of Euros every year.
While the fashion industry initially developed in Europe and the United States (the Italian footwear industry is one of the largest in the world and the textile industry is one of the United States’ most important employers in the manufacturing sector), today, fashion is an international and highly globalised sector.
China’s fashion industry, for instance, is set to become the world’s second largest fashion market by 2020, with sales expected to reach over RMB 1.3 trillion (EUR 182 billion) – roughly three times their current level.[1] According to the Boston Consulting Group, China will account for 30% of the global fashion market’s growth over the next five years.[2]
China therefore represents both opportunities as a manufacturing hub and a maturing consumer market, and risks, as a potential source of counterfeit merchandise. In order to avoid potentially damaging losses, EU SMEs operating in the fashion industry should take important measures to protect their intellectual property rights (IPR) in China. This blog outlines relevant IPR protection strategies in China, of particular relevance to the fashion industry.
Southeast Asian Unity Approaches
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The ASEAN IPR SME Helpdesk takes a look ahead towards the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) in 2015. Is this the beginning of a new era for foreign companies in Southeast Asia or business as usual?


