Strict International Patent Laws Hurt Developing Countries

Strict International Patent Laws Hurt Developing Countries, an arti­cle in YaleGlobal from 2002 by Amy Kapczynski:

In 1998, 39 phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal com­pa­nies filed a law­suit against South Africa. They hoped to stop the gov­ern­ment from pro­duc­ing the generic drugs that would have made treat­ment afford­able for the country’s AIDS vic­tims. A pub­lic out­cry ensued, and crit­ics accused phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal com­pa­nies of valu­ing profit over human life. Although these same com­pa­nies were even­tu­ally pres­sured into drop­ping the law­suit, the con­flict illus­trates a prob­lem inher­ent in recent free trade agree­ments – inflex­i­ble patent reg­u­la­tions can pre­vent devel­op­ing coun­tries from obtain­ing or pro­duc­ing afford­able ver­sions of the med­i­cine they need.

Understanding the law­suit requires a bit of back­ground. Patents are tem­po­rary monop­o­lies granted by gov­ern­ments. They give the inven­tor a right to exclude every­one else from pro­duc­ing, sell­ing, or dis­trib­ut­ing a prod­uct in that coun­try. Monopolies are gen­er­ally viewed as a bad thing, because they cre­ate what econ­o­mists call “dead­weight losses.” So why are gov­ern­ments grant­ing them? The the­ory is that the higher prices that patents allow com­pa­nies to charge pro­vide incen­tives to develop and com­mer­cial­ize new prod­ucts. The dirty secret about patents, as a law school pro­fes­sor of mine once put it, is that no one knows how strong patents have to be to serve this pur­pose. For exam­ple, are twenty years of patent pro­tec­tion nec­es­sary to pro­vide suf­fi­cient incen­tives for research? Or is ten years suf­fi­cient? Under inter­na­tional rules, patents must now be granted for a min­i­mum of twenty years — although until recently, patents were often much shorter, even in the U.S.

Here is another dirty secret: Patents can­not gen­er­ate inno­va­tion where there is no market.

Faced with a poten­tial pub­lic health cri­sis [dur­ing the anthrax cri­sis], Congress rec­og­nized what many other coun­tries have been argu­ing all along: that patents are not “rights” but rather priv­i­leges — and that they do not come before the rights to health and life.

How might this kind of logic apply to patents (or other forms of IP) out­side of the med­ical con­text? And what would be a ratio­nale approach to resolv­ing it?

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