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Washington, September 30, 2013:
The burgeoning Indian economy, which once appeared to be a potential key U.S. trade partner for decades to come, now has become a battleground over everything from brand-name drugs to big-budget Hollywood movies.
The burgeoning Indian economy, which once appeared to be a potential key U.S. trade partner for decades to come, now has become a battleground over everything from brand-name drugs to big-budget Hollywood movies.
India’s handling of intellectual
property rights and patents has raised the ire of lawmakers on Capitol Hill,
governors from across the nation, business leaders and pharmaceutical giants —
and if that path continues, analysts say, the economic relationship between the
two nations may come to a grinding halt.
“A wide swath of U.S. businesses
have been targeted by these [Indian] policies. It really seems to be a basic
industrial policy of the Indian government right now to build up its own
domestic industries, whether it be pharmaceuticals or the technology area or
elsewhere. Hopefully, President Obama will be raising these issues and we can
reach a solution here,” said Jay Taylor, vice president of international
affairs at Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA).
India has revoked, or denied in one
form or another, multiple U.S. drug patents, which lets Indian companies
produce cheaper, generic versions for sale in the South Asian nation. While
many of these brand-name drugs would be too expensive to sell in big numbers in
a developing country such as India, pharmaceutical companies and U.S. officials
say they never could have been developed without American investment and
research.
The U.S.-Indian trade rift, bubbling
for years, has reached the surface in recent months. It is expected to be a top
topic when Mr. Obama meets with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Friday
in Washington.
This summer, more than 200 members
of Congress wrote to Mr. Obama urging him to raise the issue “at the highest
levels of the Indian government.”
This week, governors from 14 states
— including Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley, a Democrat, and Ohio Gov. John
Kasich, a Republican — wrote a similar letter blasting India’s economic
approach.
“Given India’s role as an economic
leader among emerging countries, there is concern that India’s policies may
have a spillover effect to other countries,” the governors said.
Those policies, analysts say, affect
a wide range of sectors of the U.S. economy.
India has taken steps to allow only
domestically manufactured products in the energy and technology sectors. The
nation is one of the worst offenders when it comes to bootlegged copies of
American films, analysts say, and has blocked imports of many other foreign
products.
But the pharmaceutical industry
perhaps has been hit the hardest.
More than a half-dozen drugs have
had their patents revoked in favor of Indian production or have had “compulsory
licenses” issued against them. Such licenses allow Indian companies to produce
generic versions of the drug, even though it still is — or, in theory, should
be — protected by patents.
In March 2012, the Indian government
issued a compulsory license to a national firm to make cheaper versions of the
drug Nexavar, co-produced and co-marketed by Onyx Pharmaceuticals Inc. of the
U.S. and German giant Bayer Corp. The drug is used to treat kidney disease.
In April, an Indian court issued a
ruling that denied a patent for the drug Glivec, used to treat leukemia and
other illnesses. The product is manufactured and patented by U.S. firm Novartis
AG.
According to PhRMA, the Indian court
cited a rule requiring that the drug be proved to have “enhanced efficacy,”
meaning it showed invention with health benefits not seen in previous drugs.
Even though the drug is patented in 40 other countries, India has refused to
patent it.
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