Intellectual Property: U.S. Trade Policy Guidance on WTO Declaration on Access to Medicines May Need Clarification

GAO-07-1198 September 28, 2007
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Summary

The WTO Agreement on Trade-Related Intellectual Property (TRIPS) requires all 151 World Trade Organization (WTO) members to provide baseline protections, including 20-year patents for innovative pharmaceuticals. The Trade Act of 2002 granting Trade Promotion Authority (TPA) to the President outlined three negotiating objectives related to intellectual property (IP). The first two aim to strengthen IP rights and enforcement abroad. The third calls for respect of the WTO Doha Declaration on TRIPS and Public Health, which addresses access by developing countries to patented medicines, particularly in epidemic and emergency situations. This report (1) describes the Declaration and its interpretation by the United States and other nations; (2) analyzes how U. S. Trade Representative (USTR) has balanced respect for the Doha Declaration with the other two IP objectives in negotiating free trade agreements; and (3) evaluates the extent of public health input by agencies and the private sector. We reviewed official WTO and U.S. government documents, interviewed U.S. and foreign government officials, and obtained private sector views.

The 2001 Doha Declaration on TRIPS and Public Health was adopted by WTO members to stress the importance of implementing the TRIPS Agreement in a manner supportive of public health. The U.S. interprets the Declaration as a political statement that recognizes the severity of public health crises while affirming the importance of IP protection. It maintains that the Declaration neither changes existing TRIPS obligations, nor creates new rights and does not assigns public health greater priority than IP protection. U. S. Trade Representative (USTR) says the Declaration clarifies flexibilities already in TRIPS, including the flexibility to compulsorily license patents under certain circumstances. USTR recognizes these as being allowed for WTO members, including those facing public health crises, but only in a fashion that will not unduly harm patent holders. Some developing countries assert they provide broad discretion to ensure access to medicines when IP regulations present barriers to affordable care. USTR balances respect for the Doha Declaration with TPA's other two IP negotiating objectives by actively promoting high levels of IP protection for pharmaceuticals while making targeted allowances for developing country partners. USTR believes that this longstanding U.S. pursuit of high IP protections for pharmaceuticals creates incentives for investment in research and development of new treatments, ultimately enhancing public health. With regard to the TPA objective of respecting the Doha Declaration, USTR's key policy change was to not insist upon two provisions it sees as relevant to the Declaration in FTAs with developing country trading partners. Otherwise, USTR has continued to pursue other pharmaceutical related IP protections that it does not consider related to the Doha Declaration. Reactions to USTR's record are mixed. The pharmaceutical industry considers these types of FTA provisions critical for preserving incentives for research and innovation. However, some academics, experts, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), and generic producers have expressed concerns that these provisions may delay entry by cheaper generic products. In response to similar concerns in Congress, a bipartisan agreement was reached with the Administration to revise four recent FTA's prior to their submission for Congressional approval. U.S. interagency and private sector input into trade negotiations related to public health have remained limited since Congress enacted TPA. The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and other agencies generally endorse USTR's view that strong IP protection promotes public health and access to medicines, and interagency input has been primarily technical in nature. Within the formal private sector trade advisory system, a public health representative was recently added to 2 of the 16 private sector advisory committees, but not until USTR had concluded nine trade agreements. USTR did obtain some public health views through other formal and informal means during this period.



Recommendations

Our recommendations from this work are listed below with a Contact for more information. Status will change from "In process" to "Implemented" or "Not implemented" based on our follow up work.

Director:
Team:
Phone:
Loren Yager
Government Accountability Office: International Affairs and Trade
(202) 512-4347


Matters for Congressional Consideration


Recommendation: If Congress disagrees with U.S. Trade Representative's interpretation and implementation of TPA guidance with regard to IP rights and public health, Congress may wish to specify more clearly its intentions for U.S. trade policy and public health policy input related to balancing public health concerns and the negotiation of IP rights in trade agreements.

Status: In process

Comments: When we determine what steps the Congress has taken, we will provide updated information.