Saturday, October 12, 2019
Crime And The Black Market In Modern Day China :: essays research papers
 Crime and the Black Market in Modern Day China           With a population of approximately 1,203,097,268 people , China, who has  the world's largest population, also has the world's fastest growing black  market and crime problem. In China, crime rates have been climbing an estimated  10 percent a year since the early 1980s . China is a country that is currently  experiencing both political and economic instability. Economic reforms that  have been put in place by the government have only widened the income gap,  creating a middle class with money and a lower class of newly poor. With an  ever increasing size in this gap of income distribution and the relative ease of  making money through black market sales, it is no wonder more and more Chinese  are turning to a life of commonly accepted and profitable crime.       Thomas Jefferson once said, "he who receives an idea from me, receives  instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his taper at mine,  receives light without darkening me." Unfortunately, Thomas Jefferson lived in  a different time. He lived in a time when piracy was not as evident and  intellectual property was not worth so much. In China, the largest crime which  is currently occurring is intellectual piracy. Unlike the pirates of old who  plundered the merchant vessels and ports of the South China Sea, modern day  pirates are more interested in illegal replication of intellectual rights. From  music compact discs to computer software to films to best selling novels, The  Chinese black market is a virtual warehouse of "plundered goods". It is  estimated that there are at least thirty illegal high tech factories in China  that can churn out over 20,000 optical discs a day. America's Microsoft  estimates that 98 out of every 100 of its software programs being used in China  are illegal copies . Because of these statistics, and because this only amounts  to a small amount of the estimated piracy which occurs in China, program  manufacturers, worldwide, are lobbying the Chinese government to impose stricter  standards and greater restrictions upon the distribution and sale of illegal  intellectual rights. In July of 1996, investigators from Microsoft led Chinese  officials to a plant near Guilin in Guanxi Province, where they found 5700  bootleg windows CDs. The plant had four production lines. Three of them were  operated around the clock. It was estimated that this particular plant churned  out 20,000 illegal copies of Microsoft programs a day. A trade report to  Congress from the Trade office cites China as the worst violator of United  States - copyrighted intellectual property. The report, which came days after    					    
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