Title: Henry G' Grabowski
1Alternatives to the Patent System Perspectives
from Economics
- Henry G. Grabowski
- Duke University
- May 23, 2004
2The Cost Structure of Research Based
Pharma/Biopharma Industries
- RD intensity is higher than for other industries
- RD is largely a global, joint cost, sunk at
launch - Marginal cost (MC) of production is relatively
low - Marginal cost pricing (PMC) will not cover RD
3Importance of Pharmaceutical Patents
- Many economic studies have found that patent
protection is a critical factor for
pharmaceuticals. - Length of exclusivity period is more important in
pharmaceuticals than in other high-tech
industries. - Basic reason is the costs of innovation are high
in pharmaceuticals, while costs of imitation are
low.
4Costs of Innovation Versus Imitation
- Innovation Process
- Long gestation periods - 10 to 14 years
- Low success rates - only 1 in 5 NCE candidates
entering clinical testing become marketed drugs - High RD costs - 400 million per NCE
- Imitation Process
- Short gestation process - 1 to 2 years
- Low RD costs - 1 to 2 million to demonstrate
bioequivalence
5Dynamic Competition in the Pharmaceutical Industry
- First introduction in a new class significant
benefits spillover to patients and payors - Within class competition emerges in the case of
most new drugs after a few years - When patents expire, generic entry pushes prices
toward marginal cost - Market power on demand side has been growing
6Some Important New Drug ClassesIntroduced During
the 1990s
Triptans (migrane) Macrolides (anti-infectives) At
ypical anti-psychotics (schizophrenia) Protease
Inhibitors (AIDS) Neutrophil Growth Factors
(neutropenia) Taxanes (cancer) Cox-2 Inhibitors
(arthritis) SERMs (osteoporosis)
7Alternatives to the Patent System
- Two main alternatives are discussed in the
literature - Prizes
- RD contracts/subsidies
- Some economists advocate parallel approaches
- Voluntary opt-out prize system (Shavell)
- Prizes for new medicines for diseases of LDCs
(Kremer and Sachs) - Love and Hubbard (LH) propose a more radical
solution - Replacing patents with national global RD
budgets financed directly or indirectly by taxes
8Are National Global Budgets Feasible?
- Problematic that countries would agree to
enforceable treaties with targeted RD - Many countries would be arguably worse off
- Characteristics of proposed RD targets
- Arbitrary nature
- Tax increases
- Protectionism issues
- Would free riders be denied new medicines?
9Where Will the Benefits Come From?
- LHs proposal is predicated on the belief that
there would be large resource savings in terms
of - Duplicate and wasteful RD
- Reduction in marketing
- Elimination of profits
- But their approach would be subject to its own
set of cost inefficiencies and adverse incentives - Private equity funding of early stage biopharm
RD would be especially vulnerable
10RD Contracts and Prizes Some Key Concerns
- RD Contracts
- Information asymmetries
- Principal Agent problems
- Difficulties in closing failed programs
- RD Prizes
- Administrative costs and uncertainties
- Credibility to RD organizations
- Political rent seeking
11The Atomic Energy Commissions Patent
Compensation Board
- Compared to the value of inventions and the
profits that might have been earned if exclusive
patent rights could have been enforced, the Fermi
and Goddard awards were miserly. - There is an inherent conservative bias in the
prizes granted by administrative and
quasi-judicial bodies. - It is doubtful whether a generalized award
system administered in this conservative
tradition would motivate as much risk bearing as
the patent system presently does.
F. M. Scherer, Industrial market structure and
economic performance,2nd Ed. p. 458
12Some Concluding Thoughts
- National RD budgets are fraught with potential
adverse RD incentive effects - Prizes and other push/pull incentives have an
important role in the case of neglected diseases
of LDCs and related situations - The Orphan Drug Act has been very successful in
increasing innovation for rare diseases through a
set of push/pull incentives