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Compulsory licensing and access to drugs.

Charitini Stavropoulou1, Tommaso Valletti

  • 1University of Surrey, Guildford, UK, c.stavropoulou@surrey.ac.uk.

The European Journal of Health Economics : HEPAC : Health Economics in Prevention and Care
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Compulsory licensing can improve access to essential medicines, but its impact on pharmaceutical innovation and drug pricing depends on a Southern country's generic manufacturing capacity. Lower costs can increase access, though potentially at innovation

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Area of Science:

  • Health Economics
  • Intellectual Property Law
  • Pharmaceutical Policy

Background:

  • Compulsory licensing permits patented drug use without owner consent, aiming to enhance access to essential medicines.
  • The pharmaceutical industry expresses concern that widespread compulsory licensing may hinder innovation.
  • The interplay between compulsory licensing, generic drug manufacturing capabilities, and intellectual property rights is complex.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To model the economic interaction between a Northern patent holder and a Southern government seeking drug access.
  • To analyze how a Southern country's generic manufacturing cost influences compulsory licensing outcomes.
  • To evaluate the global welfare implications of compulsory licensing, considering both access and innovation.

Main Methods:

  • Economic modeling of patent holder-government negotiations.
  • Analysis of compulsory licensing under varying generic manufacturing costs.
  • Global welfare assessment incorporating drug access and innovation impacts.

Main Results:

  • Drug access and innovation are significantly influenced by the Southern country's ability to produce generics.
  • High manufacturing costs deter compulsory licensing; moderate costs lower prices but reduce access and innovation.
  • Low manufacturing costs enable generic production, maximizing access but with some innovation reduction.

Conclusions:

  • Compulsory licensing can yield positive global welfare, even with reduced innovation, particularly when generic production is feasible.
  • The effectiveness and impact of compulsory licensing are contingent on manufacturing costs and intellectual property strength.
  • Policy decisions regarding compulsory licensing have potential global repercussions across markets.