"India remains on the priority watch list this year for lack of sufficient measurable improvements to its IP framework on long-standing challenges and new issues that have negatively affected US right holders over the past year, particularly with respect to patents, copyrights, trade secrets, and enforcement," the US Trade Representative (USTR) said in a report.
The 'Special 301' report is an annual review of the global state of IP protection and enforcement.
The USTR's priority watch list names those coutnries which it considers are not properly protecting the US copyrights and patents.
The report alleges that India's IPR regime is not in compliance with global norms, a charge India strongly contests at all forums.
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Trading partners on the priority watch list present the most significant concerns this year regarding insufficient IP protection or enforcement or actions that otherwise limited market access for persons relying on IP protection, the report said.
It added that 11 countries including China, India, Indonesia, Russia and Thailand are on this list.
"These countries will be the subject of intense bilateral engagement during the coming year," it added.
The chamber also said that Indian government needs to modernise its copyright laws.
"India continues to dismiss the need for substantive changes to its intellectual property (IP) laws and regulations.
"We will continue to encourage the Indian government to address the biggest gaps in its IP protections, including uncertainties and challenges in the patent system," it said.
Multi-national companies particularly from pharma sector have time and again raised concerns over India's IP regime saying New Delhi's policies discriminates foreign firms.
The developed countries have raised questions about section 3 (d) of the Indian Patent Act 1970 and compulsory licensing (CL), saying the norms restrict innovation.
The section does not allow patent to be granted to inventions involving new forms of a known substance unless it differs significantly in properties with regard to efficacy. In a way, it stops ever-greening of patents.
India's Commerce and Industry Minister Nirmala Sitharaman yesterday said that India's intellectual property right (IPR) laws are in compliance with the global rules and any "suspicious narrative" about the credibility of domestic IPR norms "is just not warranted".