Pharmaceutical patent bargains: the Brazilian experience


Autoria(s): Salama, Bruno Meyerhof; Benoliel, Daniel
Data(s)

01/06/2010

01/06/2010

01/03/2010

Identificador

Benoliel, Daniel; Meyerhof Salama, Bruno. Pharmaceutical patent bargains: the brazilian experience. Artigos (working papers) DIREITO GV. São Paulo: DIREITO GV, n. 51, mar. 2010.

http://hdl.handle.net/10438/6643

Idioma(s)

en_US

Publicador

Escola de Direito de São Paulo da Fundação Getúlio Vargas (DIREITO GV)

Relação

Artigos Direito GV (Working papers) ; 51

Palavras-Chave #Patentes - Brasil
Tipo

Working Paper

Resumo

In the backdrop of the strict patent regime flatly adopted by the World Trade Organization (WTO) for all countries, a few countries constantly challenge this system through aggressive patent bargains. Within the pharmaceutical sector, noticeably, some countries now threaten to issue or otherwise actually issue compulsory licenses that may sway large pharmaceutical companies into selling drugs with large discounts or into granting voluntary licenses domestically. That is conspicuously the negotiation strategy adopted by Brazil in its negotiations with big international pharmaceutical companies.This paper explains Brazil’s aggressive bargaining approach based on an analysis of two aspects of its political economy. The first has to do with the international context of patent bargaining in the post-WTO era. Accordingly, the existence of large and fast growing domestic markets position countries such as Brazil as strategic destinations for Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) and trade. Together with an absence of a propensity to innovate in pharmaceutical products, these conditions boost Brazil’s bargaining power for issuing compulsory licenses over pharmaceutical products. The second aspect is related to political economy dynamics inside Brazil. Accordingly, the political framework in Brazil undermines long-term policies and favors short-sighted ones also vis-a-vis R&D investments in the pharmaceutical industry. This remains true regardless of the strictness of the patent regime in place. The lesson of Brazil is relevant arguably for other more powerful developing countries which presently examine Brazil's approach while further challenging the WTO's strict patent policy for the future.