5 Don't Sacrifice American Innovation on the Altar of "March-In" - Politics Information

Don't Sacrifice American Innovation on the Altar of "March-In"


By Niels Reimers


A DC-based advocacy group has just petitioned the government to seize the patent covering the prostate cancer drug Xtandi so generic manufacturers can copy the medication. The group behind this petition has issued similar calls in the past. But both Democratic and Republican administrations have rejected such petitions on the grounds that they misconstrue current law, as the current administration should likewise recognize.

The government contributed approximately $500,000 to research at UCLA that served as the foundation for Xtandi. The university's findings were eventually licensed by Astellas -- which, after more than $1.4 billion of investments and years of research and development, created the medication.

Since the government funded early-stage research underpinning Xtandi, the petitioners argue, federal officials should forcefully lower its price by licensing the medication to generic manufacturers. Of course, that's not warranted by the law that took the medication from bench to bedside: the Bayh-Dole Act.

Prior to 1980, America had an innovation problem. The government funded basic research at university and non-profit labs and retained the patents resulting from the research. Inventors had no incentive to move their discoveries from the laboratory into the marketplace. It was up to the government to license these patents for commercial development. The process was a mess. Twenty-six different licensing policies governed the federal agencies funding research.The government often offered only non-exclusive licenses. Private companies were loath to invest their time and money in such a dysfunctional system.

As a result, fewer than 5% of federally funded discoveries were licensed for commercial development. More than 28,000 taxpayer-funded insights languished. Not a single new drug was developed from federally funded R&D.

The Bayh-Dole Act broke that gridlock by allowing university research labs to retain their patents and license them to private firms in exchange for royalties.

The result opened a floodgate of American innovation. The law has helped grow the U.S. economy by up to $1.7 trillion. Over the past 25 years, U.S. universities and research institutions have been granted more than 80,000 patents, and some 70% of university innovations have been licensed to small companies.

The Bayh-Dole Act contains a "march-in" clause, which allows the government to require the patent owner to license additional companies if efforts are not being made to develop the technology.

Some organizations have long sought to use the government's march-in authority as a mechanism to impose price controls, especially on pharmaceuticals. Administrations since have rejected all such petitions. The Obama-Biden Administration dismissed more of these off-base petitions than any other.

This petition grossly distorts the Bayh-Dole Act. If it were adopted, innovators would know that anyone could ask the government to "march in" to allow copiers to undercut them in the marketplace.

No one would make investments under such conditions. Once again, taxpayer-funded discoveries -- like the one that led to the prostate cancer drug the petition concerns -- would languish in labs.

Protecting innovation isn't a partisan issue. The Biden administration can prevent a catastrophic drop in private-sector research and development investment by rejecting this latest march-in petition.

Niels Reimers is the founder and former executive director of Stanford University’s Office of Technology Licensing. This piece originally ran in the San Jose Mercury News.

More Resources


06/01/2024
Biden Has Gotten His Wish--and It Won't Help
The truth is Donald Trump being a convicted felon won't change your opinion of him. In fact, now some Republicans are more likely to vote for him.

more info


06/01/2024
The Martyr of Mar-a-Lago
Trump can never be wrong; he can only be wronged.

more info


06/01/2024
Voters Increasingly Worried About the Rule of Law
I opposed the Republican attempt to use the personal life of Bill Clinton to impeach him, and this attempt to use the personal life of Donald Trump to jail him is no different.

more info


06/01/2024
The Big Biden Panic
President Joe Biden is trailing, but perhaps the guilty verdict against Trump will save him.

more info


06/01/2024
Thank God Case Was Brought in a State With No GOP Control
MSNBC host Joy Reid calls out Black Republican leaders decrying former President Donald Trump's guilty verdict.

more info


06/01/2024
Republicans Vow To Scorch the Earth After Trump Conviction
Spurred by the volcanic temper of their base, Republicans are now preparing to scorch the earth in the wake of former President Donald Trump's conviction, potentially setting off a chain reaction that could fundamentally alter the American political system entirely.

more info


06/01/2024
Democrat Lawyers Are Running Rings Around Republicans
Either you're willing to jail Democrats on the same terms they're using to jail Trump, or you're merely controlled opposition.

more info


06/01/2024
What the Biden Campaign Thinks the Verdict Means


more info


06/01/2024
This Was a Typical Communist Show Trial
In November, we have what may be our last chance to save this country-not just make our country great again, but to make it greater than it has ever been.

more info


06/01/2024
Kennedy Fights for Game-Changing Spot on Debate Stage


more info


06/01/2024
The Ghost of Covid Past Looms Over Gen Z Voters


more info


06/01/2024
In Major Escalation Biden Allows U.S. Arms To Strike in Russia


more info


06/01/2024
Triumvirate of Pols, Lobbyists, Pentagon Hurt U.S.


more info


06/01/2024
How To Help Affordable Housing Problem-Solvers


more info


06/01/2024
My Enemies
In conversation with Russ Roberts

more info



Custom Search

More Politics Articles:

Related Articles

Trump's Socialist Attack on Americans' Health and Medical INnovations Must Be Stopped


Imagine if Barack Obama signed an executive order implementing socialist price controls on prescription drugs. And suppose that decision limited the drugs available to patients, dried up funding for innovative new treatments and resulted in the unnecessary deaths of thousands of Americans a year.

Biden Won't Win Votes by Threatening Swing State Jobs


It sometimes seems as if former Vice President Biden is hell bent on losing this November.

New Drug Pricing Executive Order Burdens Patients


President Trump just signed an executive order designed to reduce drug prices. Dubbed a "Most Favored Nations" policy, the order pegs Medicare payments for medicines to the prices paid by foreign governments.

Enjoy Your Usual Life, But Vote


Occasionally we all feel like we are living in a rut. Our days and weeks are filled with the same activities and schedules. We mow grass, rake leaves, clean the house, sweep out the garage and do the same jobs. We go to the same grocery store on a certain day, wash our car at the same place and see the same people along the way. We go to the same place of worship, and read the same daily or weekly newspaper. Our lives are made up of routines, schedules and the usual.

The Sun is Shining


The Sun is shining today and will rise tomorrow. For more years than we know the Sun has followed this same pattern.

Giving Thanks to Society’s Economic Benefactors


With all the attention commanded by the presidential campaign, election, and aftermath, plus the ongoing COVID-19 story, many other issues have faded into the background. Though escaping the headlines, some of these other issues will be with us for a long time, and contributions to the public discussion of such issues will often have a long-term impact.

Importing Drugs Endangers Lives


On most issues, Democrats and Republicans remain deeply divided. But there's one policy that unites both -- prescription drug importation.

On the Impeachment and Conviction of President Trump


The House of Representatives, with the sole responsibility of impeachment, has passed a single Article of Impeachment charging President Donald Trump with committing a high crime, namely that he “made statements that encouraged—and foreseeably resulted in—imminent lawless action at the Capitol.” In short, his rally speech, it is claimed, amounted to “incitement to engage in the insurrection.”

Death of a Defector: Ion Mihai Pacepa, RIP


On February 14, 2021, the world quietly lost one of the most intriguing, enduring figures of the Cold War. He was Lt. Gen. Ion Mihai Pacepa, the highest-ranking Soviet Bloc official ever to defect to the United States.

Stop Businesses From Exploiting This Health Program for the Poor


Over the decades, Congress has created a number of programs intended to help the poor, the sick, the downtrodden. As a result, certain businesses and industries find ways to exploit these efforts and profit in ways lawmakers never foresaw or intended.

Preventing the Next Public Health Crisis Can Define Biden's Legacy


The Biden administration's plan to defeat the coronavirus is underway -- and notably includes intentions to "build better preparedness for future threats." This detailed guidance could not have come at a better time. While we are making progress against the current pandemic, we remain in the midst of a worsening health crisis posed by antibiotic resistance.

For Seniors' Sake, Protect the Innovation that Brought Us Covid Vaccines


The breakneck pace of Covid-19 vaccine development will go down in history books as one of the great triumphs of modern medicine.

Raise the Corporate Tax Rate? Economic Obtuseness in High Places


Having proposed trillions of dollars of additional federal spending, President Joe Biden and allies have launched a belated and somewhat desperate search for additional tax revenues. The economic reality is that there simply isn’t enough wealth available in the private sector to fund the explosion in government spending. The danger is that changes in the tax code may do more damage than good.

America's Goose that Lays the Golden Eggs


America's research and development institutions have long been the envy of our competitors, flourishing at the top of global rankings. But our state-of-the-art innovation capabilities — responsible for bringing COVID-19 vaccines and countless other breakthroughs to market — haven't flourished here by happenstance. They have been nurtured over decades of smart policies, and those policies are now at risk.

A Public Option Will Destroy Private Insurance


Congress is trying to chart a path forward on health reform. Several congressional Democrats just announced plans to draft a bill that would create a public health insurance option.