Shall We Fear a Covid-19 Patent Waiver?

14 Pages Posted: 9 Feb 2022 Last revised: 2 Jun 2022

See all articles by Guido Cozzi

Guido Cozzi

University of St. Gallen - Institute of Economics (FGN)

Date Written: February 9, 2022

Abstract

Shall vaccine patents be temporarily suspended? In a simple model, I reflect the essence of the debate on the Covid-19 patent waiver. The central message is that if the probability of imitating innovative vaccines is low, then a patent waiver would be harmless to future R&D. Conversely, a patent waiver would be undesirable if it is too easy to imitate future innovations.

This paper also derives a simple policy rule for R&D subsidies that governments can use to correct the adverse effects of the waiver on the incentives to innovate.

The vaccine industry is highly concentrated. While the social gains from successful imitation are huge, it is hard to transfer vaccine know-how from the handful of patent holders to potential imitators. In this environment, loosening intellectual property rights (IPRs) protection in a pandemic has significant macroeconomic advantages. Still, it may harm future innovation because it would create an expectation of future IPRs waivers. This paper allows an upbeat assessment of the conditions that make a patent waiver desirable, even considering the future R&D implications. Moreover, it shows how reasonably minimal rises of R&D subsidies can overcome the IPRs uncertainty.

Keywords: COVID-19, Research and Development, Vaccines, Intellectual Property Rights

JEL Classification: I18, O30.

Suggested Citation

Cozzi, Guido, Shall We Fear a Covid-19 Patent Waiver? (February 9, 2022). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4015067 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4015067

Guido Cozzi (Contact Author)

University of St. Gallen - Institute of Economics (FGN) ( email )

Bodanstrasse 1
St. Gallen, 9000
Switzerland

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