It's the best way to end the pandemic for good
By
The
big drug companies are killing people.
I get to say
this about the drug companies, now that President Biden has said that Facebook
is killing people because it was allowing people to use its system to spread
lies about the vaccines. There is actually a better case against the drug
companies.
After all, they
are using their government-granted patent monopolies, and their control over
technical information about the production of vaccines, to limit the supply of
vaccines available to the world. As a result, most of the population in the
developing world is not yet vaccinated. And, unlike the followers of Donald
Trump, people in developing countries are not vaccinated because they can’t get
vaccines.
The TRIPS Waiver Charade
The central item in the story about speeding vaccine distribution in the developing world is the proposal put forward at the WTO last October (yes, that would be nine months ago), by India and South Africa, to suspend patents and other intellectual property rules related to vaccines, tests, and treatments for the duration of the pandemic.
Since that time, the rich countries have been engaged in a
massive filibuster, continually delaying any WTO action on the measure,
presumably with the hope that it will become largely irrelevant at some point.
The Biden administration breathed new life into the proposal when it endorsed suspending patent rights, albeit just for vaccines. This is the easiest sell for people in the United States and other rich countries since it is not just about humanitarian concerns for the developing world.
If the pandemic is allowed to spread unchecked in the
developing world it is likely only a matter of time before a vaccine-resistant
strain develops. This could mean a whole new round of disease, death, and
shutdowns in the rich countries until a new vaccine can be developed and widely
distributed.
After the Biden
administration indicated its support for this limited waiver, many other rich
countries signed on as well. Germany, under longtime chancellor Angela Merkel,
has been largely left alone to carry water for the pharmaceutical industry in
opposing the vaccine waiver.
I had the chance
to confront the industry arguments directly last week in a web panel sponsored
by the International Association for the Protection of Intellectual Property
(link included when it becomes available). It’s always educational to see these
arguments up close and real people actually making them.
The first line
of defense is that the waiver of patent rights by itself does not lead to any
increase in vaccine production. This is of course true. Vaccines have to be
manufactured, eliminating patent rights is not the same thing as manufacturing
vaccines.
But once we get serious, the point is that many potential manufacturers of vaccines are being prevented from getting into the business by the threat of patent infringement suits. In some cases, this might mean reverse-engineering the process, something that might be more feasible with the adenovirus vaccines produced by Johnson and Johnson and AstraZeneca, than with the mRNA vaccines.
The
manufacturing process for these vaccines is similar to ones already used by
manufacturers in several countries in the developing world, as well as several
in the rich countries that are not currently producing vaccines against the
pandemic.
Another possible
outcome from eliminating patent rights is that the drug companies may opt to do
more voluntary licensing agreements under the logic that it is better to get
something than nothing.
If manufacturers
use reverse engineering to produce vaccines, the patent holders get nothing.
They would be much better off with a limited royalty on a licensing agreement,
even if it is less than they could have expected if they had been able to
maintain an unchecked patent monopoly.
(Editor: Reverse
engineering is how startup computer companies built “clones”of the early PCs or
personal computers. They bought IBM personal computers and paid one set of
engineers to take it apart and describe what they found. Then a second set of
engineers used the descriptions to build a personal computer. Voila no
royalties to IBM.)
The other route that suspending patent monopolies may open is one where former employees of the pharmaceutical companies may choose to share their expertise with vaccine manufacturers around the world. In almost all cases these employees would be bound by non-disclosure agreements. This means that sharing their knowledge would subject them to substantial legal liability.
But some of them may be
willing to take this risk. From the standpoint of potential manufacturers, the
patent waiver would mean that they would not face direct liability if they were
to go this route, and the countries in which they are based would not face
trade sanctions.
Open-Sourcing
Technology
While suspending patent rights by itself could lead to a substantial increase in vaccine production, if we took the pandemic seriously, we would want to go much further. We would want to see the technology for producing vaccines fully open-sourced. This would mean posting the details of the manufacturing process on the web, so that engineers all over the world could benefit from them.
Ideally, the engineers from the pharmaceutical companies would also be
available to do webinars and even in-person visits to factories around the
world, with the goal of assisting them in getting their facilities up-to-speed
as quickly as possible.
The industry
person on my panel didn’t seem to understand how governments could even arrange
to have this technology open-sourced. He asked rhetorically whether governments
can force a company to disclose information.
As a legal
matter, governments probably cannot force a company to disclose information
that it chooses to keep secret. However, governments can offer to pay companies
to share this information. This could mean, for example, that the U.S.
government (or some set of rich country governments) offer Pfizer $1-$2 billion
to fully open-source its manufacturing technology.
Suppose Pfizer
and the other manufacturers refuse reasonable offers. There is another
recourse. The governments can make their offers directly to the company’s
engineers who have developed the technology. They can offer the engineers say
$1-$2 million a month for making their knowledge available to the world.
This sharing
would almost certainly violate the non-disclosure agreements these engineers
have signed with their employers. The companies would almost certainly sue
engineers for making public disclosures of protected information. Governments
can offer to cover all legal expenses and any settlements or penalties that
they faced as a result of the disclosure.
The key point is
that we want the information available as soon as possible. We can worry about
the proper level of compensation later. This again gets back to whether we see
the pandemic as a real emergency.
Suppose that
during World War II Lockheed, General Electric, or some other military
contractor developed a new sonar system that made it easier to detect the
presence of German submarines. What would we do if this company refused to
share the technology with the U.S. government so that it was better able to
defend its military and merchant vessels against German attacks?
While that scenario would have been almost unimaginable – no U.S. corporation would have withheld valuable military technology from the government during the war – it is also almost inconceivable that the government would have just shrugged and said “oh well, I guess there is nothing we can do.” (That’s especially hard to imagine since so much public money went into developing the technology.)
The point is that the war was seen as a national emergency and the
belief that we had to do everything possible to win the war as quickly as
possible was widely shared. If we see the pandemic as a similar emergency it
would be reasonable to treat it in the same way as World War II.
Perhaps the most
interesting part of this story is what the industry representative saw as the
downside of making their technology widely available. The argument was that the
mRNA technology was not actually developed to be used against Covid. Its value
against the pandemic was just a fortunate coincidence. The technology was
actually intended to be used for vaccines against cancer and other diseases.
From the industry perspective, the downside is that if they made their technology more widely available, then other companies may be able to step in and use it to develop their own vaccines against cancer and other diseases.
In other words,
the big fear is that we will see more advances in health care if the technology
is widely available, pretty much the exact opposite of the story about how this
would impede further innovation.
I gather most of us do not share the industry’s concerns that open-sourcing technology could lead to a proliferation of new vaccines against deadly diseases, but it is worth taking a moment to think about the innovation process.
The industry has
long pushed the line that the way to promote more innovation is to make patent
and related monopolies longer and stronger. The idea is that by increasing
potential profits, we will see more investment in developing new vaccines, cures,
and treatments.
But these monopolies are only one way to provide incentives, and even now they are not the only mechanism we use. We also spend over $40 billion a year in the United States alone on supporting biomedical research, primarily through the National Institutes of Health.
Most of this money goes to more basic research, but many
drugs and vaccines have been developed largely on the government dime, most
notably the Moderna vaccine, which was paid for entirely through Operation Warp
Speed.
If we put up more public money, then we need less private money. I have argued that we would be best off relying pretty much entirely on public money. This would take away the perverse incentives created by patent monopoly pricing, like the pushing of opioids that was a major factor in the country’s opioid crisis.
It
would also allow for the open-sourcing of research, which should be a condition
of public funding. This could create the world the industry fears, as many
companies could jump ahead and take advantage of developments in mRNA
technology to develop vaccines against a variety of diseases.
But even if we
don’t go the full public funding route, it is pretty much definitional that
more public funding reduces the need for strong patent monopolies to provide
incentives. If we put up more dollars for research, clinical testing, or other
aspects of the development process, then we can provide the same incentive to
the pharmaceutical industry with shorter and/or weaker monopoly protections.
In the vaccine context, open-source means not only sharing existing technology, but creating the opportunity for improving it by allowing engineers all of the world to inspect production techniques.
While the industry would like to pretend that it
has perfected the production process and possibilities for improvement do not
exist, this is hardly plausible based on what is publicly known.
To take a few examples, Pfizer announced back in February that it found that changing its production techniques could cut production time in half. It also discovered that its vaccine did not require super-cold storage.
Rather, it could be kept in a normal freezer for up to two
weeks. In fact, Pfizer did not even realize that its standard vial contained
six doses of the vaccine rather than five. This meant that one sixth of its
vaccines were being thrown into the toilet at a time when they were in very
short supply.
Given this
history, it is hard to believe that Pfizer and the other pharmaceutical
companies now have an optimal production system that will allow for no further
improvements. As the saying goes, when did the drug companies stop making
mistakes about their production technology?
Has Anyone Heard of China?
It is remarkable how discussions of vaccinating the world so often leave out the Chinese vaccines. They are clearly not as effective as the mRNA vaccines, but they are nonetheless hugely more effective in preventing death and serious illness than no vaccines.
And, in a context where our drug companies insist that they couldn’t possibly
produce enough vaccines to cover the developing world this year, and possibly
not even next year, we should be looking to the Chinese vaccines to fill the gap.
China was able
to distribute more
than 560 million vaccines internally, in the month of June, in addition to the
doses it supplied to other countries. Unless the country had a truly massive
stockpile at the start of the month, this presumably reflects capacity in the
range of 500 million vaccines a month. The Chinese vaccines account for close
to 50 percent of the doses given around the world to date.
It would be
bizarre not to try to take advantage of China’s capacity. There obviously are
political issues in dealing with China, but the U.S. and other Western
countries should try to put these aside, if we are going to be serious about
vaccinating the world as quickly as possible.
‘Mistakes
Were Made’—NOT Our National Motto
If a
vaccine-resistant strain of the coronavirus develops, and we have to go through
a whole new round of disease, deaths, and shutdowns, it will be an enormous
disaster from any perspective. The worst part of the story is that it is a
fully avoidable disaster.
We could have
had the whole world vaccinated by now, if the United States and other major
powers had made it a priority. Unfortunately, we were too concerned about
pharmaceutical industry profits and scoring points against China to go this
route.
Nonetheless, we
may get lucky. Current infection rates worldwide are down sharply from the
peaks hit in April, but they are rising again due to the Delta variant. It is
essential to do everything possible to accelerate the distribution of vaccines.
It is long past time that we started taking the pandemic seriously.
Dean
Baker co-founded the Center for Economic and Policy Research in
1999. His areas of research include housing and macroeconomics, intellectual
property, Social Security, Medicare and European labor markets. He is the
author of several books, including "Rigged: How Globalization and the
Rules of the Modern Economy Were Structured to Make the Rich Richer."