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


11/20/2024
What Donald Trump's Revenge Agenda Is Hiding
Look past the flashy and controversial Cabinet nominees to find that Project 2025 is already being implemented

more info


11/20/2024
Make Education Great Again!
Imagine these words as the first speech delivered by the incoming Secretary of Education.Today, I am here to deliver bitter medicine: American education has failed. Teachers and parents, administrato

more info


11/20/2024
Time-Honored Tradition of Blaming the Left for Dem Defeats
This argument is particularly unconvincing this time around. And it doesn't offer a realistic prescription for future success.

more info


11/20/2024
Dems Are Going To Get Younger and More Radical


more info


11/20/2024
The Blurred Line Between X and the Trump Administration
Forget the ridiculous

more info


11/20/2024
DOGE Is a Great Idea. Trump Should Make It Permanent
DOGE represents a harbinger of deregulation for an incoming Trump administration, especially with Dogecoin enthusiast Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy at the helm.

more info


11/20/2024
The DOGE Plan To Reform Government
Following the Supreme Court's guidance, we'll reverse a decadeslong executive power grab.

more info


11/20/2024
Could Trump Actually Get Rid of the Department of Education?
Getting rid of the agency would cause a lot of harm and wouldn't really change school curriculum.

more info


11/20/2024
How Dems Are Losing Tomorrow's Elections Today
America is outgrowing the Democratic Party.

more info


11/20/2024
Can a Fractured Democratic Party Learn the Lessons of 2024?
After a bruising campaign season and a humiliating defeat at the polls, this week saw Dems' internal conflicts spilling out into public view. Party insiders are now engaged in tit-for-tat Twitter battles that do nothing to offer the party a roadmap back to political contender status. Instead, they confirm normies' worst caricatures of Democratic dysfunction.

more info


11/20/2024
Pennsylvania Voters to Sen. Casey: 'It's Over, Bob'
Columnist David Marcus talks to voters in Bucks County and finds Democrats and Republicans agree that Sen. Bob Casey's refusal to concede is a bad look.

more info


11/20/2024
NC Republicans' Shameless New Power Grab
North Carolina voters spoke loud and clear two weeks ago when they elected Democrats to some of the most prominent statewide offices.

more info


11/20/2024
Trump Can and Should Fire Jerome Powell
Legacy media have been obsessing over whether President-elect Donald Trump can remove Jerome Powell, chairman of the Federal Reserve (the Fed). Jerome Powell recently came out and stated he would serve out his term - which ends in 2026. Further, Chairman Powell claims any attempt by President Trump to remove him is not "permitted under the law." Unfortunately for Chairman Powell, President-elect Trump can remove him - and he should - to make the federal bureaucracy respond to democratic pressures once again.

more info


11/20/2024
SecDef Austin: Women in Military Make U.S. Stronger
Austin in an exclusive interview with NBC News called women in the military a strong asset. Trump's choice for Secretary of Defense has cast doubt on women in combat roles.

more info


11/20/2024
Drone, Missile Defense Top Priorities for Next Defense Secretary
Pete Hegseth faces critical challenges in addressing U.S. vulnerabilities to advanced missile and drone threats as global tensions rise.

more info



Custom Search

More Politics Articles:

Related Articles

Americans Can't Afford Insurance — and Obamacare is to Blame


The number of uninsured Americans rose in 2018 for the first time since the Affordable Care Act passed in 2010, according to the Census Bureau.

ICER Discriminates Against People with Rare Diseases


FDA officials approved a record number of rare disease treatments last year. One groundbreaking medicine treats an inherited bone condition that causes intense pain and immobility. Another treats Fabry disease, a genetic condition that can lead to kidney failure or stroke.

Minor Legislation with Massive Implications


U.S. Senator Ron Johnson (R-WI) is promoting the "Prevent Government Shutdown Act of 2019." The goal of the act is to prevent disruptive government shutdowns.

When Humans Don't Procreate


The "hook" of the story intrigued me: "This hasn't happened in all of modern history..." An email from "The Crux" last month blared, "Global population growth to virtually stop by 2100."

Beware of Bills in Sheep's Clothing


There is a bipartisan tradition of naming bills such that no reasonable person would oppose them. For instance, changes to our tax system came with the passage of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. Who's against jobs? And how could anyone have voted against the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (i.e., "Obamacare")?

Offshore Bans Hurt Working Class Americans


Congressional Democrats just betrayed America's working class.

If You Like Your Health Plan, You Can't Keep It Under a Public Option


Nearly two in three Americans support the creation of a government-sponsored health plan to compete against plans offered by private insurers, according to the most recent survey data from the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Don't Legalize Discrimination Against People With Disabilities


Imagine if the federal government treated disabled Americans as second-class citizens. It's an appalling thought. But it could happen soon -- if some special interest groups get their way.

It's Time to Turn the Prescription Drug Debate on its Head


Politicians typically blame drug companies for soaring pharmacy prices. But insurers, pharmacies, and other middlemen are the real driving force behind rising drug spending.

U.S. Carbon Emissions Are Actually Dropping


Increased natural gas consumption helped bring down U.S. greenhouse gas emissions in 2019, according to a recent report from the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

"Buy American" Executive Order Could Slow Delivery of a Coronavirus Cure


President Trump is considering a "Buy American" executive order requiring government agencies to purchase medicines and medical supplies domestically.

Don't Disrupt the Supply Chain in the Midst of a Pandemic


The Trump administration fears America has lost its ability to mass-produce the medicines and medical supplies needed to fight the coronavirus and other, future pandemics. So it's considering an executive order to bring drug and medical-supply manufacturing back to the United States.

Intellectual Property Makes Sure Drug Makers Deliver


House Democrats Peter DeFazio, Rosa DeLauro, Lloyd Doggett, and Jan Schakowsky want to nullify intellectual property rights on any experimental treatments for COVID-19. They believe their proposals will prevent "price gouging and profiteering" without harming innovation.

Move These Projects Forward and Get America Back to Work


With more than 40 million Americans out of a job due to the coronavirus pandemic, states are scrambling to help the unemployed and laying plans to reopen the economy.

COVID-19 Cost-Effectiveness Research Deepens Racial Disparities


A newly released study by the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER), a Boston-based nonprofit, attempts to answer a weighty question: How much should it cost to treat the coronavirus?