The Antlers American

Biden’s plan to reduce drug prices will damage innovation

- Lamar Smith represente­d the 21st Congressio­nal

By Lamar Smith, Former Congressma­n for the 21st Congressio­nal District of Texas

In December, the Biden Administra­tion issued a proposal that could be very damaging to American innovation. The plan would empower the government to seize patent rights for products that the government believes in its judgment are too expensive.

In laying out this new scheme, the Administra­tion succumbed to years of pressure from activists who argue that the plan is a legal and simple way to help lower healthcare costs. In fact, the plan is not only of dubious legality, but it would also complicate -and seriously undermine -- the historic innovation pipeline created by the very law under which the Administra­tion proposes to act.

The Bayh-Dole Act revolution­ized the U.S. system for licensing technology developed at academic institutio­ns. Prior to 1980, the government was responsibl­e for licensing innovation­s that arose from federally backed research so that these novel ideas could be turned into useful products. It was a terribly 95% of academic discoverie­s remained undevelope­d.

Alarmed that so much government-funded research was going to waste, Senators Birch Bayh and Bob Dole devised the framework we still use today. Their law allows universiti­es to take charge of licensing their own patents, transferri­ng technology to start-up partners with the skills and resources to go further.

Bayh-Dole has helped to make the United States the most innovative country on the planet. Between 1996 and 2020, the tech transfer it enabled contribute­d $1.9 trillion to the U.S. economy, supported 6.5 million jobs, and spawned more than 15,000 new companies. Since 1980, Bayh-Dole has fostered the developmen­t of over 200 new medicines and vaccines.

The law includes a provision that allows the government to “march in” and relicense patent rights on federally funded discoverie­s in certain circumstan­ces, such as when a product is needed for a public health crisis but the company holding the rights has failed to commercial­ize it. Over the years, however, some have seized on this “marchin” language to argue that Bayh-Dole allows the government to use “march-in rights” to seize patents on products it deems too expensive as a means of price control. But legal experts who have studied the issue have repeatedly concluded the law was never intended to be used for this purpose.

Moreover, while the Administra­tion describes its proposal solely as an action to lower health care and prescripti­on drug costs, it is by no means limited to medicines. In fact, the proposal describes how “march-in” would work in areas that have nothing to do with medicines: 3-D print -

The Administra­tion’s proBayh-Dole, and the practical impact would be devastatin­g. Universiti­es will be reluctant to accept government funding for research, since any such funding will grant the government “march-in” rights to any products developed from the research. University licensees will pay less to universiti­es for inventions encumbered by “marchin” rights. Consumers will lose out on new products. We’ll risk falling behind in critical sectors, like renewable energy, sustainabl­e - ligence, and biotechnol­ogy.

While bowing to adopting their creative interpreta­tion of Bayh-Dole to impose pharmaceut­ical price controls may be smart election year politics, it is terrible innovation policy. The Administra­tion should shelve this proposal and keep Bayh-Dole intact.

District of Texas for 32 years. While in Congress, he served as chairman of the Judiciary Committee, the Science, Space, and Technology Committee, and the Ethics Committee. This piece originally ran in the Dallas Morning News.

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