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Plenary Presentation 4
Jean O. Lanjouw
Intellectual Property and the Availability of
Pharmaceuticals in Poor Countries
Abstract
There continues to be widespread criticism of the extension of patent rights on pharmaceuticals in the
developing world as required by World Trade Organization membership. This paper examines
arguments in favor and against this strengthening of worldwide patent protection. It emphasizes that
these new pharmaceutical patents promise benefits and costs that differ with the characteristics of diseases.
Some diseases primarily affect poor countries. For these diseases, patents will not be sufficient to attract
substantial private investment because purchasing power is low. However, globally available and welldefined
patent rights could increase the benefits derived from greater public financing of research on
pharmaceutical products for the developing world. For major global diseases the justification for extending
patents in poorer countries is less clear. Thus the optimal global framework for pharmaceutical patents
might require differentiating the protection given to products in accordance with their extremely different
global markets. The paper considers standard intellectual property and regulatory mechanisms that
could be used to differentiate protection. All have serious drawbacks. It then describes a new
mechanism that would make differentiating protection a more feasible policy option.
Paper Lanjouw
Beyond TRIPS: A New Global Patent Regime
Jean Olson Lanjouw
Brief-Summary_Paper Lanjouw
FAQ_Paper Lanjouw
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