The introduction of pharmaceutical product patents in India
The introduction of pharmaceutical product patents in India
12 min read
Rate this book:
About This Book
The decision to require that countries grant product patents for pharmaceutical innovations as a condition of membership in the World Trade Organization was very contentious. Almost 50 developing countries were not granting patent monopolies for drugs during the period the Uruguay round of GATT was being debated and these countries fiercely resisted the inclusion of this requirement, claiming that vastly higher drug prices would be associated with such patents. On the other side, business interest in the West urged them to consider the benefits such protection might bring both in terms of focusing more research on tropical diseases and encouraging greater domestic and foreign investment in local research activities. This paper discusses the various theoretical implications for a developing country of introducing product patents for pharmaceuticals. Using India as an example, it then brings together information gathered from both published sources and personal interviews to examine the potential magnitude of these effects. While not arriving at a conclusive answer to the question posed in the title, there are some suggestions about the way events might unfold as the policy is implemented.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Jean Olson Lanjouw
Do patents matter?
Do patents matter?
Economic consequences of a cha
Economic consequences of a changing litigation environment
How to count patents and value
How to count patents and value intellectual property
Micro-level estimation of welf
Micro-level estimation of welfare
Patent protection
Patents, price controls, and a
Patents, price controls, and access to new drugs