Which Countries are Granted the Most New Patents?
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Which Countries are Granted the Most New Patents?

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Which Countries are Granted the Most New Patents?

Which Countries are Granted the Most New Patents?

Every year, the UN’s World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) tracks hundreds of thousands of patents across industries.

These patents grant their inventors exclusive intellectual property rights over their creations. They encourage new ideas, spur scientific development, and lead to new technologies and entire sectors being born.

However, the number of patents granted varies greatly across nations. When viewing the origin of each patent’s applicant, we see a handful of countries dominating certain industries.

In this graphic, Jacqueline Ann DeStefano-Tangorra uses 2021 WIPO data to showcase which countries were granted the most new patents, along with their sector categorizations.

Countries with the Most New Patents

In 2021, out of 1,608,375 patents across multiple fields, 87% were granted to innovators from just six countries.

Applicants by CountryGranted Patents (2021)% of Total
🇨🇳 China607,75837.8%
🇺🇸 United States286,20517.8%
🇯🇵 Japan256,89016.0%
🇰🇷 South Korea156,9729.8%
🇩🇪 Germany69,6724.3%
🇬🇧 United Kingdom20,0091.2%
❓ Unknown24,6771.5%
🌎 Other Countries186,19211.6%
World Total1,608,375100.0%

After rapidly increasing its patent output in recent years, China topped the chart in 29 out of 36 total fields including computer technology, electrical machinery, and digital communication. The Chinese government’s focus on innovation led to the nation’s applicants receiving 38% of the 1.6 million patents granted in 2021.

The United States—home to the world’s largest tech companies—came in second with 286,205 granted patents by origin. The U.S. also topped four fields of its own: medical technology, engines and turbines, basic communication processes, and unknown (for inventions that can’t be assigned to a specific field).

Not far behind is Japan with 256,890 granted patents. It dominated the other nations in the fields of semiconductors, optics, and furniture and games, cementing its well-earned reputation of technological innovation.

“Unknown” origin applicants, for which the nationality or country of residence couldn’t be determined for the inventor(s), accounted for 24,677 of granted patents.

The Origin of New Patents by Field

When assessing which technological fields inventors are pursuing in 2021, it’s not unexpected that digital and electrical technologies are in the lead:

RankMain Field of Technology% of Granted Patents
1Computer technology10.3%
2Electrical machinery, apparatus, energy6.6%
3Digital communication6.5%
4Measurement5.9%
5Medical technology4.8%
6Transport4.5%
7Civil engineering3.7%
8Other special machines3.6%
9Audio visual technology3.3%
10Semiconductors3.3%
11Machine tools2.9%
12Chemical engineering2.8%
13Handling2.7%
14Optics2.6%
15Pharmaceuticals2.4%
16Materials, metallurgy2.4%
17Control2.4%
18Mechanical elements2.3%
19Telecommunications2.3%
20Furniture & games2.3%
21Basic materials chemistry2.3%
22Engines, pumps, turbines2.2%
23Biotechnology2.1%
24Organic fine chemistry2.0%
25IT methods for management1.9%
26Macromolecular chemistry, polymers1.7%
27Other consumer goods1.7%
28Environmental technology1.6%
29Thermal Processes and apparatus1.6%
30Surface technology, coating1.5%
31Textile & paper machines1.5%
32Food chemistry0.9%
33Basic communication processes0.6%
34Analysis of biological material0.6%
35Micro structural & nano technology0.2%
36Unknown0.003%

There are also many patents granted mainly in infrastructure-related fields, which have become all the more important following the COVID-19 pandemic and an increasing focus on trade.

These include medical technology, transport, civil engineering, and semiconductors.

A Tech-Savvy Future

The number of patents granted in 2021 is a testament to the growing importance of innovation around the world.

While a select few nations have dominated the patent landscape so far, there are many others making significant contributions to innovation and intellectual property.

As technology continues to advance and the global economy becomes more interconnected, the importance of intellectual property rights will only continue to grow.

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This article was published as a part of Visual Capitalist's Creator Program, which features data-driven visuals from some of our favorite Creators around the world.

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Jobs

Ranked: Which Jobs Are Safest from AI?

AI continues to disrupt workplaces, but not all jobs are equally at risk.

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Graphic showing the jobs that are the safest from AI

Ranked: Which Jobs Are Safest from AI?

This was originally posted on our Voronoi app. Download the app for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Public-facing jobs are safest. Roles like emergency medical technicians (EMTs) and social workers have low automation risk due to constant human interaction.
  • Management roles are resilient. Jobs involving leadership and decision-making remain harder to automate.
  • Skilled trades remain strong. Physical, hands-on work is less vulnerable to artificial intelligence.

AI continues to disrupt workplaces, but not all jobs are equally at risk. This infographic ranks the occupations least likely to be automated, based on public interaction, task complexity, and human judgment.

From EMTs to HR managers, the most resilient jobs typically involve interpersonal engagement, leadership, or hands-on technical skills that are difficult to replicate with AI systems.

The data for this visualization comes from Esquimoz. It analyzes a blend of automation risk scores and the necessity for public interaction to determine which jobs are safest from artificial intelligence.

Human Interaction Protects Emergency Roles

Emergency medical technicians (EMTs) and healthcare social workers top the list, with 100% public interaction and very low automation risk. These roles require on-the-spot decisions, emotional intelligence, and real-time responsiveness, traits that AI still struggles to match.

OccupationPublic interaction (%)Automation RiskScore
Emergency medical technicians100%7%100
Healthcare social workers100%11%98
Lawyers100%29%86
Medical & health services managers90%26%82
First-line supervisors of construction trades & extraction workers79%17%80
HR managers83%26%78
General & operations managers80%36%70
Maintenance & repair workers72%35%65
First-line supervisors of administrative support workers82%50%62
Training & development specialists58%29%60

Managers Remain Hard to Replace

Leadership positions such as HR managers, operations managers, and construction supervisors rank highly due to their reliance on judgment, strategy, and team coordination. While some managerial tasks can be automated, the core human element remains essential.

Skilled Trades Show Resilience

Jobs like maintenance and repair workers and construction supervisors continue to resist automation due to their physical and situational demands. These professions often involve complex, variable environments that AI has yet to master.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out ChatGPT’s Rising Traffic vs. Popular Websites on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

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