Dear
friends,
The
Ministry
of
Public
Health
recently
announce
some
news: it
would
remove
compulsory
licensing
(CL)
from all
generic
medicines
copied
from
patented
overseas
medicines.
This new
policy,
officially
called
the
Patent
Act,
will
make
expensive
foreign
medicines
more
affordable
to the
ordinary
Thai
citizen
who
cannot
afford
the
expensive
foreign
medicines.
However,
by
making
this
announcement,
the
Ministry
of
Public
Health
demonstrates
considerable
courage.
This
measure
worries
foreign
drug
companies
who own
the
patents
because
this act,
in
effect,
destroys
their
monopolies.
This Act
will no
doubt
put a
big dent
in their
profits
and
provoke
them to
lobby
for
counterblows
against
Thai
products
in the
trade
arena.
This
incident
is only
one
example
of the
problems
caused
by the
pharmaceutical
monopolies
and the
expensive
patent
fees
they
levy.
Their
practices
of
setting
astronomical
prices
and
controlling
production
volumes
hold the
consumer
hostage.
Even
though
the real
purpose
of
granting
patents
(the
power to
monopolize)
is given
to the
patent
owner in
order to
reward
the
patent
owners
and
motivate
further
innovation.
Patents
are
supposed
to
enable
the
survival
of the
innovators.
However,
because
the
prices
that
drug
companies
are
allowed
to place
on their
designer
drugs is
so very
high,
this
system
runs the
risk of
destroying
itself.
In fact,
giving
drug
conglomerates
the
power to
monopolize
the
market
also has
significant
disadvantages.
For
instance,
consumers
are
forced
to buy
expensive
products
and
services,
yet they
do not
receive
the
benefit
of
products
and
services,
whose
quality
is
determined
by a
competitive
markct.
In the
existing
monopoly,
the
consumers
still
lack the
freedom
to
choose
because
they are
constrained
to buy
products
from one
manufacturer
only.
This
case
raises
the
question
of
whether
there
might be
other
methods
other
than
patents
that
would
both
reward
innovation
and, at
the same
time,
preserve
consumer
benefit.
The idea
I would
like to
propose
here is
a way to
transform
innovation
into
public
products.
This
could be
done if
the
government
were to
compensate
innovators.
The
premise
of my
proposal
is that
innovators
bring
benefit
to
society,
but they
must
bear the
cost
burden
themselves.
Instead,
the
government
would
invest
in
innovators
by
buying
knowledge
and
technology
from
them.
The
government
would
pay
innovators
and then
sell or
license
the
information
to the
private
sector,
which
would in
turn
manufacture
the
products
in a
competitive
marketplace.
The
government
would
earn VAT
or taxes
from
manufacturing
and
distributing
the
products.
A second
method
would be
to allow
manufacturers
to
freely
copy
products,
but the
government
would
collect
special
taxes
from the
manufacturers
for
copied
products.
In turn,
the
government
would
give the
taxes to
innovators
as
compensation.
The
government
will set
the tax
rate for
copied
products
and
services
by
considering
the
costs to
the
innovator
and the
benefit
the
innovation
would
yield to
society.
This
method
would
help to
lower
the
prices
of new
products
and
services
down
from the
sky high
monopoly
prices,
enabling
more
people
to
afford
the new
products.
Because
a number
of
manufacturers
would be
competing
in the
marketplace,
manufacturers
would be
motivated
to
improve
the
quality
of their
product.
At the
same
time,
innovators
would be
rewarded.
But this
system’s
success
is
contingent
on its
success
in
sufficiently
rewarding
the
innovators.
Another
idea is
to
prohibit
the
first
innovator
from
become
the sole
proprietor
of the
patent
but
instead
to allow
other
innovators
to also
have the
right to
manufacture
such
products.
This
idea
assumes
that
innovators
may
invent
similar
innovations,
for
example,
the
theory
of
quantum
physics
as well
as the
nuclear
bomb
were
developed
simultaneously
by
different
parties.
Knowledge
and
technology
are so
advanced
that
many
innovations
may be
ready to
be
developed
by any
number
of
innovators.
Giving
the
rights
to the
first
innovator
may not
be fair
to other
innovators
because
have
worked
almost
as hard
as the
first-past-the-post
innovator.
However,
my ideas
are
still in
the
nascent
stage.
Other
considerations
are
still
necessary
before
my ideas
can
become
practice,
for
example,
·
How do
we prove
that an
innovation
was not
copied
from the
first
one?
·
Should
those
who
innovate
after
the
first
innovator
has
finished
also be
given
copy
right
protection?
·
Should
the
first
innovator
be given
greater
monopoly
rights
that
then who
finish
innovating
the same
thing
later
on?
I
challenge
the
government
to
consider
my
ideas.
This
government
could
help to
break
the
misnomer
that
innovations
are for
the rich
only.
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