Title: Social
1Social economic aspects of biotechnology
- Erik Mathijs
- Division of agricultural
- and food economics
- K.U.Leuven
2Introduction
- A reminder the potential of biotech
- Three sets of issues
- Overview of the 3 lectures
- Lecture 1
3The potential of life sciences and biotechnology
- Enabling technology (like IT) wide range of
purposes for private and public benefits - Health care
- Agro-food
- Non-food uses of crops
- Environment
4Health care
- To find cures for half of the worlds diseases
- To replace existing cures becoming less effective
(e.g., antibiotics) - To enable cheaper, safer and more ethical
production of traditional and new drugs and
medical services (e.g., growth hormone,
haemophiliacs free from AIDS)
5Health care
- To provide personalised and preventive medicine
based on genetic predisposition, targeted
screening, diagnosis and innovative drug
treatments (pharmacogenomics) - To offer replacement tissues and organs (stem
cell research, xenotransplantation)
6Agro-food
- Disease prevention
- Reduced health risks
- Functional food
- Reduced use of pesticides, fertilisers and drugs
- Use of more sustainable agricultural practices
(e.g., conservation tillage) - Fight hunger and malnutrition (lecture 3)
7Non-food uses of crops
- Complex molecules for the manufacturing, energy
and pharmaceutical industries - Biodegradable plastics, biomass energy, new
polymers, etc.
8Environment
- Bioremediation of pollluted air, soil, water and
waste - Cleaner industrial products and processes (e.g.
enzymes or biocatalysis)
9Main societal issues three sets of questions
- Economic, social and ethical benefits and costs
of biotech products - Regulatory responsability
- Legal and effective ownership of genetic material
10Set One Impact
- Benefits e.g., reduced use of chemicals, plants
with desirable characteristics, more food - Costs e.g., environmental and food safety
hazards, distributional impacts, ethical
considerations (intrusion of humans into natural
processes, repress technologies with potential of
humanitarian benefits)
11Set Two Regulation
- Have governments adequately assessed the possible
health and environmental effects? - Has adoption been rushed as a result of
commercial pressures? - Should one wait until long-term studies of the
effects can be concluded? - Or is it enough to deduce from scientific
studies? - What are the implications for international trade?
12Set Three Property Rights
- Who owns the genetic material?
- Science enforces intellectual property rights
(e.g., terminator technology) - Control shifts to the private sector and raises
concerns
13Overview
- Lecture 1 Exploring the Economics of
Biotechnology (by Erik Mathijs) - Lecture 2 GMOs in Food Economic Impact on
Various Stakeholders in the EU and in the World
(by Koen Dillen) - Lecture 3 Prospects of Biotechnology in
Developing Countries (by Eric Tollens)
14Lecture 1 Exploring the Economics of
Biotechnology
- Who are the stakeholders?
- An overview of the conference Science and
Cents Exploring the Economics of
Biotechnology , Dallas, April 2002 - Consumer issues
- Case study Struggle for public opinion and
regulatory control
15The stakeholders
- The Private Sector
- Life Science companies
- Other companies, farmers, etc.
- Public interest groups
- Consumer groups
- Environmental groups
- The Public Sector
- Government agencies
- Scientists and the scientific establishment
16Life science companies
- How does this sector look like?
- How important is this sector?
- What is the current status of this sector?
17Life science companies structure
- Small number of very large pharmaceutical
companies GlaxoSmithKline, Merck, Novartis,
Pfizer, etc. - Large number of biotech companies Amgen, Chiron,
Genentech, etc. - USA dominates
- Other countries are emerging
18Life science companies structure
World US Europe Canada Asia
Public company data
Revenues (bn) 41.4 30.3 8.3 1.5 1.4
RD expense (bn) 22.0 16.3 5.0 0.6 0.2
Net loss (bn) 12.5 9.4 2.8 0.3 0.1
Employment (000) 194 143 33 8 10
Number of companies
Public 613 318 102 85 108
Private 3749 1148 1776 332 493
19Life science companies situation
- Too many companies
- Changing character alliance network of specialty
companies (cfr. ICT industry) - Critical problems
- Lack of harmonization of regulations
- Public fear and opposition
20Life science companies future
- Advances in genetic research are setting off an
industrial convergence that will have profound
implications for the global economy. Farmers,
computer companies, drugmakers, chemical
processors and health care providers will all be
drawn into the new life-science industry. To make
the transition successfully, theyll have to
change the way they think about their businesses.
21Life science companies future
- Example agriceuticals
- Broccoli against cancer
- Corn against cancer, osteoporosis, heart diseases
- Fruits and vegetables with vaccines agains
diarrhea, tetanus, diphteria, hepatitis B, cholera
22Life science companies future
- A single herd of goats may soon replace a 150
million drug factory. - Medical research, which has shifted from the in
vivo study of live organisms to in vitro
experiments inside labs, is now shifting toward
in silico research using computers.
23Life science companies future
Already involved Becoming involved Soon to be involved
Chemicals Pharmaceuticals Agriculture Food processing Mutual funds Law firms Environmental mining Energy Cosmetics Supermarkets Pharmacies Military Computer hardwaresoftware Robotics Household appliances Internet Info services Media
24Other private actors
- In the case of food
- Food manufacturers (Unilever, Danone,)
- Retailers (Sainsbury, Tesco, Carrefour, Ahold,
Walmart,) - Farmers particular worry that they will be
dependent (contracts, integration) from seed
companies (e.g., Monsanto)
25Public interest groups
- Consumer groups (European Bureau of Consumer
Unions) health concerns - Environmental groups environmental concerns,
power concentration concerns - Greenpeace
- WWF
- Friends of the Earth
- Controversies
26(No Transcript)
27Scientific community
- Universities
- Spin-off companies from universities
- National and international public research
centres (e.g., developing countries) - Disagreements between scientists e.g., impact of
GMOs on biodiversity
28The public sector government
- Evaluates concerns safety, ethics, environment,
competition, trade - Procedure and requirements differ greatly between
countries - Stimulates innovation government is a
substantial source of funds (research subsidies)
29Science and Cents
- Conference addressing following questions
- Potential economic benefits of biotech?
- Emergence of biotech industry?
- Location of biotech firms?
- Financing of research funding hurdles?
- Legal and regulatory issues?
30Economic benefits
- Lower overall medical costs 18 more costs vs.
128 savings in net nondrug medical costs
(shorter hospital days) - Higher worker productivity 34 drug costs vs.
40 less sick days 112 higher performance - Increased longevity (five months) 12 bn per
year US expenditure vs. 120 bn per year value
of increased life expectancy
? Past experience, do not generalize
31Emergence of the industry
- No incremental progress perfecting existing
products - But metamorphic revolutions creating new
industries - Many new firms, few incumbents, very unstable
shake-out will occur - Biotech hard to imitate, importance of star
scientists and thus of universities
32High-risk high-cost RD hurdles
- Only 22 of drugs entering clinical trials
receive FDA approval. But approval is not
success - 1/3 cover out-of-pocket expenses
- 20 top selling drugs gt 80 other drugs
- Earnings arise from a few drugs (cash cows)
- RD costs are high and rising
- 400 mn for new drug, 10-12 years
- 1-2 mn for generic drug, 1-2 years
33Capturing the returns to research
- Patent reach-through strategies, reaching into
future revenues from end products - Reach-through licensing patent holder restricts
access to users that agree to share a portion of
revenue from future products - Reach-through remedy ex post royalty on
unlicensed use (so only when succesful) - Reach-through claiming broad patents covering
future discoveries based on prior inventions
34Capturing the returns to research
- Arguments contra
- Overcompensation of who rests on their laurels
vs. who carry research forward - Too much control to innovators to future research
(may inhibit innovation) - Not needed when government funded
35Capturing the returns to research
- Arguments pro
- Enable researchers to capture the value of their
discoveries which is more risky than more
upstream activities - Helps valuing and financing biotech research for
example by joint ventures between univs and
industry
36Role of venture capital
- Role of VC firms
- VC firms combine managerial with scientific
talent in picking, funding, advising and managing
start-ups - VC firms invest in start-ups directly
- Distribution of returns is highly skewed, with
few big winners - VC firms have incentive to diversify
- Rising share of GDP for health care
37Role of venture capital
- Opportunities for VC firms
- Shift conventional drugs ? genomics ? proteomics
(potential of customizing drugs) - Maturation of pharmaceuticals from vertical
integration to horizontal organization
38Role of public sector
- Returns to RD and innovation gtgt investments in
labor or capital - But still underinvestment by private firms
because - High risk premiums, because few winners
- Spill-over effects from inventions
39Role of public sector
- Public policy options
- Industrial policy cannot deal optimally with
dynamic environment - Tax credits risk of reclassifying other expenses
as RD - Direct funding of RD risk of political
influence and lack of accountability
40Consumer issues
- Why do consumers care?
- Evidence of consumer concerns
- What are consumer concerns?
- The origins of consumer concerns
- Regulatory responses
41Evidence of consumer concerns
- Growing unease among consumers, but not uniform
between or within countries - Diversity reflects consumer heterogeneity and
different forces affecting consumer attitudes in
various countries - Broadly consumers in Europe and Japan more
negative than North American consumers - Consumer attitudes towards a new technology are
constantly changing
42Eurobarometer 2006
Support for GM foods (percent) EU Member States.
The EU-wide average is 27 percent.
43Support for GM foods among the "decided"
participants from selected EU Member States
1996-2005 Decided supporters include all
participants who consider GM crops useful,
morally acceptable, and feel they should be
encouraged. Decided supporters may or may not
agree the technology is risky. The decided
non-supporters do not see GM food as useful,
morally acceptable, or worthy of support. Decided
supporters and decided non-supporters added up to
approx. half of all participants.
44Willingness of Europeans to buy GM food based on
given circumstances Most Europeans would buy GM
food if they were considered healthier and used
less pesticides. But authorisation from the EU
and lower prices don't appear to be enough to get
Europeans to choose GM.
45What are consumer concerns?
- Four broad groups
- Specific food safety concerns
- Transfer of allergens through transgenics (e.g.
peanut in soybeans) - Antiobiotic-resistant marker genes
- Fear of the unknown
- fears regarding long-run consequences and
perceived inability of scientists to predict the
cumulative effects of consuming GM foods over a
long period of time - Ethical concerns consumers believe that genetic
engineering is unnatural. Patenting genes raises
ethical concerns over the right to own life - Environmental concerns
46What are consumer concerns?
- Difficult to respond to these concerns with the
standard risk analyis approach (risk assessment
risk management- risk communication), since the
problem is one of uncertainty rather than risk - Risk statistcal probabilities can be attached to
different potential outcomes - Uncertainty insufficient information to
establish probabilities
47The origins of consumer concerns
- Five interrelated threads
- Lack of understanding of the technology
confusion over the meanings of terms (biotech,
genetic engineering, genetically modified, etc.) - Proliferation of food safety scares BSE, E.
coli, salmonella, lysteria, dioxin - Lack of trust in regulatory authorities and in
the assurances of science - Technology being producer rather than
consumer-focused in first wave of GM products - Influence of interest groups and media
48Regulatory responses
- Policies governing the approval and regulation of
GM food differ between countries - USA and Canada product-based approach, products
are assessed on their safety regardless whether
GM or conventional voluntary labelling - EU process-based approach, separate procedure
for GM precautionary principle (all potential
risks must be known and quantifiable) mandatory
labelling
49Case study
- The struggle for public opinion
- US strong lobby of life science companies not
a hot topic for the public - Europe strong lobby of environmental NGOs hot
topic for years - The struggle for regulatory control
- National regulation stakeholder involvement more
and more important - International regulation e.g., WTO
50Case study
- The impact of incomplete institutions and
information in the global agricultural biotech
industry - Two examples
- Dr Arpad Pusztai GM food could be harmful to
human health (UK, 1998) - Dr John Losey GM maize is harmful to monarch
butterflies (USA, 1999)
51Difference in institutions
- UK weak institution, low trust
- USA strong institution, high trust
52Dr. Pusztais GM potatoes
- Experiment eating GM potatoes makes rats grow
slower and impair their immune systems turned
out not to be true due to very poor experiments - Scientific reaction The Lancet publishes the
results despite 6 reviewers rejecting outrage - Resulting govt regulation mandatory labelling of
food with gt1 GM, new institutions had to be
established - Costs high, consumers do not eat GM food
53Dr. Loseys Bt maize pollen
- Bt toxin in pollen kills butterfly larvae,
published in Nature without review - Scientific reaction a wave of studies to check
the validity results rejected - Resulting govt regulation mandatory planting
restrictions (refuge area), existing institutions
coped with the problem - Costs low, consumers continue to eat GM food