India’s pro-consumer patent regime is
an exciting alternative to the dominant IP model pushed by the US
Gilead’s
Sovaldi is a wonder drug sold at a shocker price. It is the most effective cure
for Hepatitis C, and is in high demand. But the drug has caused an outrage in
the US where patients, healthcare providers and insurers have questioned its
exorbitant price tag. For a a 12-week course, Sovaldi costs $84,000 (₹50,00,000).Sovaldi
was also in the news for an entirely different set of reasons. Earlier this
month, an Indian generic firm, Natco, filed a ‘pre-grant opposition’ to
Gilead’s patent covering Sovaldi. The move could result in the Indian Patent
Office rejecting Gilead’s patent, bringing down the price to a fraction of its
current price.This is not a one-off incident. India has tackled the issue of
unaffordable prices of drugs protected by patents by incorporating a remarkable
array of provisions into its intellectual property (IP) law.
These provisions qualify as ‘legitimate
flexibilities’ allowed under the WTO’s Trade Related aspects of Intellectual
Property Rights (TRIPS) Agreement.
And
they fall under three heads: provisions for curbing the grant of patents for
new forms of known substances (known as ‘evergreening’); allowing third-party
competitors to question a patent application before its grant; and introducing
provisions for compulsory licensing, including the grant of compulsory licence
for not working the patent locally.On the one hand, incorporating these flexibilities have resulted in the
revocation of patents covering drugs of leading pharmaceutical companies, such
as Merck, Pfizer, Eli Lilly, GlaxoSmithKline, Novartis and Roche. This has
allowed Indian generic companies to produce those drugs, leading to allegations
of IP ‘theft’.
On the
other, Indian generics makers were able to provide generic versions of these
drugs to other markets at a fraction of their cost, earning India the title of
‘pharmacy of the developing world’.If there is an idea that captures the
outcome of the last six decades of patent law reform in India, it is the legend
of the heroic outlaw, Robin Hood. India is the Robin Hood country.
Rob the rich, give the poor
Often accused of
tolerating and even promoting roguish behaviour — of robbing the intellectual
property of the rich and giving it to the poor — the accusations against India
reached an all-time high recently. The US Chamber of Commerce made strong
requests to the US Trade Representative (USTR) to categorise India as a
“Priority Foreign Country”, a status reserved for the worst offenders of
intellectual property rights.In its formative years, Indian IP law did not
grant patents for pharmaceutical products; this contributed to the creation of
a vibrant generics industry supplying cheaper drugs both nationally and
internationally.
In its
post-TRIPS form, the law now requires a higher standard of patentability for
improvement patents covering existing drugs.India, therefore, maintains two
positions in tandem: as a safe haven for ‘patent busters’ by providing a legal
framework that has exceptionally denied the maximum number of patents on
medicines in the last decade; and as the pharmacy of the developing world.
The ‘roguishness’ of states
Intellectual
property debates often revolve around the metaphor of property. The law
ascribes property status to intangible things, such as ideas. One of the
advantages of using the language of property is to ensure that, like real
property, IP too can be stolen.
An entire array of terms
has been used to define what an act of IP infringement is legally: stealing,
copying, counterfeiting, theft, etc., and the persons who participate in these
activities have been called ‘thieves’ or ‘pirates’. There is little tolerance
for roguish behaviour under IP law. Not only persons, even countries are
sometimes classified as ‘rogues’ if they fail to offer proper protection for
IP.
The
USTR meticulously publishes the IP compliance data sheet of all the countries
that matter and takes care to classify nations on the level of protection
offered for IP.The roguishness of states can be understood by the tag ascribed
to them: ‘Watch List’ or the ‘Priority Watch List’ refers to countries with
particular problems when it comes to IP protection and enforcement; ‘Priority
Foreign Country’ refers to countries with the worst IP policies and practices.
The US has put India on the Watch List ever since it became a member of the
WTO.
But
now, with severe pressure from the US Chamber of Commerce, India could be
designated “Priority Foreign Country”.India introduced pre-grant opposition of
patents as a means of checking the validity of patents before their grant, a
provision that has resulted in the rejection of many drug patents for minor
improvements including Novartis’ controversial anti-cancer drug Glivec.
India’s
grant of compulsory licence to Bayer’s Nexavar is yet another instance of
tweaking the law to suit public interest.This is the first non-essential
compulsory license issued in the absence of a medical emergency at the instance
of a generic manufacturer.India’s patent law also requires proof of enhanced
efficacy for patents on new forms of known substances, another provision that
has resulted in a heightened standard of patentability that patentees have not
been able to meet in this market.
The cost of being Robin Hood
Being
Robin Hood comes at a cost. Persecution and emulation are the two inevitable
consequences. On the one hand, India’s efforts to redefine and redesign patent
laws met with strict opposition from the US and the European Union.On the other
hand, countries such as Brazil, the Philippines, Brazil and South Africa have
either emulated or strongly favoured following India’s path. India’s patent
reforms have a remarkable extraterritorial impact.
The
strict opposition to India’s patent laws comes from the fact that it provides
an alternative model of compliance with the TRIPS Agreement vis-à-vis the
dominant model propagated by the US.Understandably, India’s alternative model
of law has seen stiff resistance in the form of counter-provisions in Free
Trade Agreements (FTAs) entered by the US and other countries.As in most cases
involving the clash of ideologies, both the law and its applications are areas
of contention.
No comments:
Post a Comment