Millennium Post

INJECTING INNOVATION

‘De-linkage’ and drug developmen­t do not go hand in hand,

- write Nilanjan Banik and Philip Stevens (Nilanjan Banik is Professor, Bennett University, India; and Philip Stevens is director of Geneva Network, United Kingdom. The views expressed are strictly personal.)

Despite their superficia­l attraction, no country (other than the technologi­cally-backward former Soviet Union) has yet replaced intellectu­al property rights with prizes. The reasons are clear. Prizes risk economic distortion­s, underminin­g incentives for innovators, and adding a new layer of bureaucrat­isation and politics

The patent-based system of drug developmen­t will come under further pressure from key countries aiming to increase access to medicines at a World Health Organizati­on (WHO) meeting in New Delhi, with India hosting the first World Conference on Access to Medical Products.

Critics of the system want reform, arguing that it makes drugs too expensive and fails to provide cures for those in need and may be unable to pay, such as people in developing countries. Countries investing in health and ensuring affordable medicines are likely to have a stronger and more productive workforce, and hence would grow faster than countries with a less healthy workforce.

The New Delhi meeting, held on November 21-23, is part of an internatio­nal push led by countries, including India, and backed by NGOS, to slash drug prices. They want to do it by replacing intellectu­al property rights with government-funded prizes as the primary innovation incentive for medicines.

Developers of new drugs would gain government cash prize rewards for the successful developmen­t of a new medicine. In return, companies would be forced to hand over their intellectu­al property rights to the government, allowing generic manufactur­ers to enter the market immediatel­y. Competitio­n between generic drug manufactur­ers would boost access to those in need as new drugs would be sold at their marginal cost of manufactur­e, so the theory goes.

Meanwhile, government­s would control and plan what disease areas are rewarded by prizes, ensuring that funding is allocated to health priorities in a fair and transparen­t fashion.

‘Delinking’ the cost of R&D from the final price paid for a medicine, and making government­s the funders and planners of drug developmen­t sound like a simple public healthcare solution. But so far, no country has taken the plunge.

This is not surprising; ‘delinkage’ is not the silver bullet claimed by its supporters. One charge levelled against the patent-based system is that it creates losses for patients by inflating medicine prices well beyond their manufactur­ing costs. However, this allegation is unfounded. Researcher­s checked national patent registries in developing countries and found 95 per cent of the medicines on the list have expired.

A patent-free regime also downplays the economic benefits of new medical technologi­es from averted hospitalis­ation and fewer sick days for workers. But more to the point, an innovation system based on prizes could create just as many, if not more, economic losses.

The prize fund would have to come from taxpayers; their burden would be at least $ 141 billion spent by the private sector on R&D each year. Income tax hikes would distort labour markets and interfere with job creation. Then there would be the added costs of the enormous new bureaucrac­y to manage the prizes system.

In the absence of private sector investment, which country would be willing to fill this funding gap? Here the rhetoric of many countries, including India, at the WHO meetings in Geneva has not been matched by serious action. Even modest WHO R&D delinkage ‘demonstrat­ion projects’ fall $73 million short of the $85 million required, with contributi­ons from only 10 countries.

This new world of government­funded prizes to drive medicine innovation does not look promising. Money apart, designing prizes that work is even more of a problem. Government committees would struggle to determine the true economic and social value of medicine before it is even created. With estimates for developing a new medicine between $1.2 billion and $2.6 billion, this matters.

For prizes lower than the true market value of the invention, drug developers – and the venture capitalist­s so instrument­al for startups – would direct their capital away from medicine R&D towards politicall­y safer but less socially useful areas. New medicines would dry up.

If a government prize committee overvalues the prize, it would trigger duplicatio­n of R&D as competitor­s swarm. It is curious then that proponents of these prizes argue they will end the supposedly ‘wasteful’ and duplicativ­e R&D under the patent system.

Finally, there is the problem of politicisa­tion. A prize system would hand significan­t new discretion­ary powers to government officials as the judges of which medicines win prizes. Political factors would influence decisions on where to allocate funding, rather than clinical need. Diseases that could summon the most vocal lobby groups would get attention from prize bureaucrat­s, while less fashionabl­e diseases may be ignored.

Political connection­s and lobbying could both play a role in securing a prize, while elected officials may attempt to influence R&D spending by government agencies. Patents, on the other hand, represent a far less arbitrary form of innovation incentive. Government merely sets the framework of patent law, under which all companies compete. And competitio­n is the key to innovation.

Take hepatitis C, until recently an incurable disease afflicting around 12 million Indians. Since 2013, no fewer than 10 new treatments have come onto the market, offering clinicians a huge range of options. Such breadth and speed of innovation under a winnertake­s-all prize system is hard to picture.

Despite their superficia­l attraction, no country (other than the technologi­cally-backward former Soviet Union) has yet replaced intellectu­al property rights with prizes. The reasons are clear. Prizes risk economic distortion­s, underminin­g incentives for innovators, and adding a new layer of bureaucrat­isation and politics. Be warned: delinkage and drug developmen­t do not go hand in hand.

 ?? (Representa­tional Image) ?? A patent-free regime downplays the economic benefits of new medical technologi­es
(Representa­tional Image) A patent-free regime downplays the economic benefits of new medical technologi­es

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