Indian Patent Policy and Public Health:Implications from the Japanese Experience
Reiko Aoki,
Kensuke Kubo and
Hiroko Yamane
No 199, Working Papers from Department of Economics, The University of Auckland
Abstract:
The introduction of pharmaceutical product patents in India and other developing countries is expected to have a significant effect on public health and local pharmaceutical industries. This paper is an attempt to draw implications from the historical experience of Japan when it introduced product patents in 1976. In Japan, narrow patents and promotion of cross-licensing were effective tools to keep drug prices in check while ensuring the introduction of new drugs. Combined with a specially conceived health insurance scheme, this allowed the emergence of drugs for diseases that particularly affect the Japanese population. While the global pharmaceutical market surrounding India today differs considerably from that of the 1970's, the Japanese experience offers a policy option that may profitably be considered by India today. The Indian patent system emphasizes the patentability requirement in contrast to the Japanese patent policy which relied on narrow patents and extensive licensing. R & D by local firms and the development of local products may be promoted more effectively under the Japanese model.
Keywords: pharmaceutical; Economics (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2006
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (3)
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http://hdl.handle.net/2292/199
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Working Paper: Indian Patent Policy and Publich Health: implications from the Japanese Experience (2006) 
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