Inequality of Ideas.
Who files more patents, earns more rent.
Intellectual property rent is the extra income earned from owning exclusive rights over ideas – through patents, copyrights, or trademarks. It rewards innovation as creators benefit from their work.
A patented drug company charges high prices because no one else can produce the same medicine for a few years.
But when these rights create long-lasting monopolies, wealth begins to concentrate in a few hands, and countries that generate more patents tend to capture more of this value. Today, this is shaping global inequality.
China holds over 5 million patents, USA 3. 5 million, Japan 2.1 million and South Korea over a million.India with far fewer patents, captures a smaller share of this value. The gap is not just economic – it reflects differences in research, education and innovation ecosystems.
India’s potential in education and research is immense. The idea behind such comparisons is to understand where we can improve and build a long-term ecosystem.
So, in today’s world, inequality is not just about wealth – but about who owns ideas.




