Home Page
08.30.2006 (previous | next)
Patents and Development

John Lauerman of Bloomberg news reports that poor countries are hoping to patent strains of the bird flu, in the hope of using the patents as a bargaining chip in negotiating lower prices for vaccines and treatments.

I anticipate seeing this strategy more and more going forward to combat such practices as the patenting of staple crops. Hopefully it will be more sophisticated and productive than sticking a thumb in the eye of perceived-to-be-menacing multinationals. The best option would be for the patent-holders to be private individuals able to freely trade or license the patents; patents held by governments might well become political footballs.

TRIPS has been portrayed as something that is imposed on or foisted on the developing world by the developed world. But there is a case to be made that adopting modern IP regimes early on will support the growth of wealth and trade even in poor countries. Increased investor interest in R&D in India after their adoption of a more patent-friendly rules for pharma is one point of evidence. Extremely poor countries might not be likely to develop a pharma industry, but a music industry or a fabric printing industry is a possibility. The special problem of AIDs complicates the argument.

posted by Solveig Singleton @ 1:42 PM | Patents

Link to this Entry | Printer-Friendly | Email a Comment | Post a Comment(1)


Comments

The article is light on information regarding how well they have sequenced the strains and have come to understand how the strains work. Why on Earth would a pharmaceutical pay money for just the sample? They could just as easily slip a big wad of cash to some of the local doctors for the raw samples.

Posted by: MikeT at August 30, 2006 2:58 PM








 
IPcentral WebLog

Blog Main

IPcentral Blogosphere Archives

Search the Blog

Recent Posts
  - IP and Marginal Cost
- Academics and Copyright
- More on Jammie Thomas from DOJ
- More Studies of Downloading
- Facebook, MySpace, and Network Externalities
- Copyright and the University: An Academic Symposium
- Tyler Cowan on Chinese Movie Piracy
- More WHO Antics--Roger Bate Reports
- Patents, Meds, and the Developing World: Clips & Links
- Jermaine Dupri's Gripe with iTunes
Archives by Month
  - December 2007
- November 2007
- October 2007
- September 2007
  - (see all)
Archives by Subject
  - Academia
- Access: Commons, Fair Use, Orphan Works, Public Domain
- Accounting
- Analog Holes
- Antitrust
- Art
- Aspen
- Big Tent
- Biotech
- Books
- Comments from Readers
- Counterfeit
- Digital Americas
- Digital Europe
- Digital Europe 2006
- DMCA
- DRM & Watermarks, etc.
- Economics, Game Theory & Public Choice
- Enforcement & Remedies
- Free Culture Movement
- Games
- General
- Infrastructure
- International
- Internet: P2P, Search Engines...
- Legislation and Legislators
- Liberty and IP
- Markets: Business, Investment & Innovation
- Media: Video, Music...
- Patents
- Pharma
- Physical Property
- Prices, Terms, and Licensing
- Privacy and Security
- Radio
- Software
- Spectrum & Wireless
- Standards
- Supreme Court
- Tax-Funded IP
- Telecom
- Theft of Service
- Universities
Links
 

Site Feed

  - Atom
- RSS 1.0
- RSS 2.0
We welcome comments by email - look for a link to the author's email address in the byline of each post. Please let us know if we may publish your remarks.


 
Home Page