http://www.cis-india.org/advocacy/ipr/pupfip/why-no-pupfip

Arguments Against the PUPFIP Bill

 The Protection and Utilisation of Public Funded Intellectual Property Bill
(PUPFIP Bill) is a new legislation being considered by Parliament, which was
introduced in the 2008 winter session of the Rajya Sabha. It is modelled on
the American Bayh-Dole Act (University and Small Business Patent Procedures
Act) of 1980. On this page, we explore some of the reasons that the bill is
unnecessary, and how it will be harmful if passed.
Summary How is the legislation
unnecessary?<http://www.cis-india.org/advocacy/ipr/pupfip/why-no-pupfip#how-is-the-legislation>

   1. The Indian government does not have vast reserves of underutilized
   patents, as the U.S. did in
1980.<http://www.cis-india.org/advocacy/ipr/pupfip/why-no-pupfip#1-the-indian-government>
   2. Technology transfer is very important, but pushing IPRs aggressively
   is not the best way of ensuring technology
transfer.<http://www.cis-india.org/advocacy/ipr/pupfip/why-no-pupfip#2-technology-transfer-is>


How is the legislation
harmful?<http://www.cis-india.org/advocacy/ipr/pupfip/why-no-pupfip#how-is-the-legislation-1>

   1. Excessive patenting lead to gridlocks and retards innovation.
   <http://www.cis-india.org/advocacy/ipr/pupfip/why-no-pupfip#1-it-s-very>
   2. The legislation makes mandatory that which is optional now, and is
   anyway being followed in many
institutions.<http://www.cis-india.org/advocacy/ipr/pupfip/why-no-pupfip#2-the-legislation-makes>
   3. Copyright, trademark, etc., seem to be covered under the definition of
   “public funded
IP”.<http://www.cis-india.org/advocacy/ipr/pupfip/why-no-pupfip#3-copyright-trademark-etc>
   4. It will result in a form of double taxation for research, and will
   increase the consumer cost of all products based on publicly-funded
   
research.<http://www.cis-india.org/advocacy/ipr/pupfip/why-no-pupfip#4-it-will-result>
   5. It could have unintended consequences of varied kinds, including
   discouraging fundamental research as well as discouraging industrial
   
research.<http://www.cis-india.org/advocacy/ipr/pupfip/why-no-pupfip#5-it-could-have>
   6. Non-disclosure requirements in the Bill restricts the dissemination of
   research within the academic community, and curtails freedom of
speech.<http://www.cis-india.org/advocacy/ipr/pupfip/why-no-pupfip#6-non-disclosure-requirements>
   7. Exclusive licensing enables restriction on the dissemination of
   academic research in the marketplace, and increase in cost of products based
   on public-funded
research.<http://www.cis-india.org/advocacy/ipr/pupfip/why-no-pupfip#7-exclusive-licensing-enables>


Arguments
How is the legislation unnecessary?
1) The Indian government does not have vast reserves of underutilized
patents, as the U.S. did in 1980.

The idea behind the Bayh-Dole Act was that the research funded by the
government (and owned, in the US, by the government) was being
underutilized. In 1980, over 28,000 unlicensed patents lay with the U.S.
government. The Act shifted the title of such works from the government to
the University or small business that conducted the research, thus allowing
them to take out patents on the research outputs. In India, under present
laws, the researcher(s) own the rights over their research whether they be
government-funded or not. Usually, due to employment contracts, the research
institutes already have the right to patent their inventions. Thus,
currently, there is no need for an enabling legislation in this regard, as
there was in the U.S. In fact, currently, the Council of Scientific and
Industrial Research (CSIR) has over 5173 patents (counting both those in
force and those under dispute), while only 222 patents are licensed (with 68
of them being under dispute). Thus, even with the IP being in the
institute's hands, there is a "problem" situation similar to that which
necessitated Bayh-Dole in the U.S. Thus, quite contrary to the aims of the
Act, further patenting will only lead to a situation of even more
underutilized patents.


2) Technology transfer is very important, but pushing IPRs aggressively is
not the best way of ensuring technology transfer.

At a recent seminar held at NUJS Kolkata on the PUPFIP Bill, it was revealed
that while IIT-Kharagpur’s TTO-equivalent (called the Sponsored Research &
Industrial Consultancy division - SRIC) currently handles over Rs.300 crores
through 850 projects, only around Rs. 5-15 crores (exact figures weren't
available) are currently made through its patent portfolio. [2] Thus patents
don't seem, on the face of things, to be the best way of ensuring technology
transfer.  Indeed, the oft-cited 28,0000 unlicensed patents held by the U.S.
government were composed primarily of patents for which industry had refused
to take exclusive licences.[3]

Many contend that one of the most important functions of a patent is to get
inventors to disclose their inventions rather than keep them as secrets.
This reason for awarding a patent is invalidated if stronger protection is
granted to trade secrets (no term limit, for instance) than for patents.
Secondly, this reason for granting patents is not valid in case of
government-funded research in academia and research institutes. The culture
of publication and the economy of reputation are sufficient to ensure
disclosure.  Even without these intrinsic factors, there grant requirements
can necessitate publication.  If mere publication is believed to be
insufficient, then the government would do well to ask for technology
dissemination plans before grants are made.  At any rate, monopoly rights in
the form of patents are thoroughly unnecessary.


How is the legislation harmful? 1) Excessive patenting lead to gridlocks and
retard innovation.

It sees protection of IPR as the sole means of encouraging innovation and
driving research to the doorstep of consumers. The trend around the world is
that of exploring alternative forms of spurring innovation. Even in India,
CSIR has gone for an innovative "Open Source Drug
Discovery<http://www.osdd.net/>"
project, which has proven very successful so far. Furthermore, recent
literature shows that excessive patenting is harming research and innovation
by creating gridlocks.[4]  If platform technologies and basic research (such
as SNP) gets mired in patents, then the transaction costs increase (not only
in terms of money, but more importantly in administrative terms).  This ends
up in research clearances getting blocked, and thus retards innovation.  It
must be remembered that intellectual property is not only an output, but
also an input.  The more aggressively the outputs are guarded and prevented
from being shared, the more the inputs will be affected.  The study of
patent thickets and gridlocks has reached such a stage that the U.S. law has
been changed to reflect this. Firstly, the Bayh-Dole Act was amended in 2000
to state that the objectives of the Bayh-Dole Act were to be carried out
"without unduly encumbering future research and discovery".  Now, the courts
(in the *Bilski* case) have increased the standard of obviousness in patent
law (which means that less patents will be granted).  Furthermore, the
U.S.P.T.O.  and the U.S. Congress are currently considering means of
overhauling the U.S. patent system, which many fear is close to breaking
down due to over-patenting.  All these are signs that the footsteps we are
seeking to follow are themselves turning back.


2) The legislation makes mandatory that which is optional now, and is anyway
being followed in many institutions.

While the CSIR labs pursue patents aggressively, they also run the OSSD
project. The latter might not be permissible if the Act is passed as it
stands.  Furthermore, this would increase the number of underutilized
patents, which is a problem faced currently by CSIR, which has had an
aggressive patent policy since the 1990s.  Unlicensed patents constitute
around 93% of CSIR's total patent portfolio.  (In contrast, MIT averages
around 50% licensing of patents.)  If aggressive patenting is made
mandatory, it adds substantially to administrative costs of all institutes
which receive any grants from the government.  These institutes might not be
large enough to merit a dedicated team of professionals to handle


3) Copyright, trademark, etc., seem to be covered under the definition of
"public funded IP".

This leads to a ridiculous need to attempt to commercialise all
government-funded research literature (and the government funds science
research, social sciences, arts, etc.).  Furthermore, while the definition
of "public funded IP" includes copyrights, trademarks, etc., yet the
substantive provisions seem to only include those forms of IP which have to
be registered compulsorily (copyright and trademark don't -- copyright comes
into existence when an original work is expressed in a medium, and trademark
can come into existence  by use).  Importantly, seeking to commercialise all
copyrighted works of research would hamper the movement for open access to
scholarly literature.  The inititative towards open access to scholarly
literature is something that National Knowledge Commission has recommended,
and is a move that would result in increased dissemination of public-funded
research, which seems to be an aim of the PUPFIP Bill as well.


4) It will result in a form of double taxation for research, and will
increase the consumer cost of all products based on publicly-funded
research.

This bill would increase the consumer cost of all products based on
publicly-funded research, because of the additional burden of patent
royalties.

Public funds research -> Institute patents research -> Pharma MNC gets
exclusive license over research -> Drug reaches market.

Assuming an exclusive licence: Cost of the drug = cost of manufacturing,
storage, etc. + *mark-up (monopolistic) cost + cost of licence.*

Thus, in effect, the public has to pay twice for the research: it pays once
to enable the scientist to conduct the research, and once again in the form
of royalties to have that research brought to the marketplace.


5) It could have unintended consequences of varied kinds, including
discouraging fundamental research as well as discouraging industrial
research.

The former could happen since institutions and individual scientists have a
financial incentive to shift their focus away from fundamental
research<http://www.researchoninnovation.org/tiip/archive/2003_5b.htm>;
the latter, conversely, because the filings and bureaucracy involved could
drive scientists away from reporting or even engaging in industrial
research<http://www.spicyip.com/docs/ppt-premnath-pdf.pdf>[pdf].
Faculty and researcher involvement in the business of licensing is a
sub-optimal usage of their talents, and there are scientists who would
rather stay away from business (as is shown by the intake of former
industry-researchers into government-funded labs such as those of CSIR).


6) Non-disclosure requirements in the Bill restricts the dissemination of
research within the academic community, and curtails freedom of speech.

This will bring about a shift in science and research which is always done
upon others' work.  This is why in the U.S., the National Institute of
Health (N.I.H.) has sought to ensure (without any legal authority) that it
only finances that research that on single nucleotide polymorphism (S.N.P.)
which is not patented, and is shared freely amongst scholars.  Since this
requirement of the N.I.H.'s does not have any legal backing (since it is
contradictory to the Bayh-Dole Act), institutions are free to get the grant
from N.I.H. and then go ahead and patent their inventions.


7) Exclusive licensing enables restriction on the dissemination of academic
research in the marketplace, and increase in cost of products based on
public-funded research.

The bill allows for both assignment of licences as well as exclusive
licences.  Both of these enable monopolistic pricing to be undertaken by the
licensee/assignee.  There are not even any mechanisms in the Act to ensure,
for instance, that a public call is made to ascertain that no parties are
willing to consider a non-exclusive licence.  Patents are generally said to
grant a monopoly right because of the opportunity to recover costs of
research and development.  When the research is being done by public-funded
money, there is no justification for monopoly rights on that research, since
there are no excessive costs to recover.



Footnotes:

[1] See So et 
al.<http://www.plosbiology.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pbio.0060262>and
Thursby
and Thursby <http://opensource.mit.edu/papers/Thursby.pdf>

[2] See Prof. Vivekanandans' presentation "Patenting and Technology
Transfer-the IIT Khargpur Experience<http://www.spicyip.com/docs/ppt-vivek.pdf>
"

[3] See Anthony So et al., *Is Bayh-Dole Good for Developing Countries*, 6
PLoS Biol e262 
(2008)<http://www.plosbiology.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pbio.0060262>
[4] See Michael A. Heller & Rebecca S. Eisenberg, Can Patents Deter
Innovation? The Anticommons in Biomedical Research, 280 Science 698
(1998)<http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/280/5364/698>




Additional Resources On the PUPFIP Bill

   - Undated: Susan Finston, India to Propose New Technology Transfer
   Legislation (Bayh-Dole 25) <http://bayhdole25.org/node/40>
   - Shamnad Basheer, Mysterious Indian "Bayh Dole" Bill: SpicyIP Procures a
   Copy (SpicyIP)
   
<http://spicyipindia.blogspot.com/2008/07/mysterious-indian-bayh-dole-bill.html>
   - February 5, 2004: NIPER holds parallel session of Indian Science
   Congress (Express
Pharma)<http://www.expresspharmaonline.com/20040205/happenings05.shtml>

   - 2007: National Knowledge Commision's Letter to Indian Prime Minister
   (National Knowledge
Commission)<http://knowledgecommission.gov.in/downloads/recommendations/LegislationPM.pdf>
   - February 1, 2008: Yudhijit Bhattacharjee, Indian Government Hopes Bill
   Will Stimulate Innovation
(Science)<http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/summary/319/5863/556a>

   - February 19, 2008: Shamnad Basheer, Exporting Bayh Dole to India:
   Whither Transparency? (Part
1)<http://spicyipindia.blogspot.com/2008/02/exporting-bayh-dole-to-india-whither.html>
(Part
   
2)<http://spicyipindia.blogspot.com/2008/02/exporting-bayh-dole-to-india-whither_21.html>(SpicyIP)
   - March 17, 2008: Kalpana Pathak, Varsities may soon own patent rights
   (Business 
Standard)<http://www.business-standard.com/india/storypage.php?autono=317122>
   - March 17, 2008: P.T. Jyothi Datta, Public-funded research may pay
   dividends for scientists (Business
Line)<http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/2008/03/17/stories/2008031751080100.htm>
   - March 17, 2008: Joff Wild, India considers Bayh-Dole style legislation
   (IAM 
Magazine)<http://www.iam-magazine.com/blog/Detail.aspx?g=c2472b7c-0f57-4e16-b1ea-389c44c3b4a6>
   - April 30, 2008: M.K. Unnikrishnan and Pradeepti Nayak, Lessons from
   Bayh Dole Act and its relevance to India
(PharmaBiz)<http://www.pharmabiz.com/article/detnews.asp?articleid=44083&sectionid=46>
   - July 2008: Sean M. O'Connor, Historical Context of U.S. Bayh-Dole Act:
   Implications for Indian Government Funded Research Patent Policy (STEM
   Newsletter) <http://ssrn.com/abstract=1265343>
   - July 09, 2008: Latha Jishnu, Does India need a Bayh-Dole Act? (Business
   Standard)<http://www.business-standard.com/india/storypage.php?autono=328187>
   - September 2008: V.C. Vivekanandan, Transplanting Bayh-Dole Act- Issues
   at Stake Authors (13 Journal of Intell. Prop.
480)<http://nopr.niscair.res.in/handle/123456789/2036>
   - September 18, 2008: Shamnad Basheer, Indian patent bill: Let's not be
   too hasty 
(SciDev.net)<http://www.scidev.net/en/opinions/indian-patent-bill-let-s-not-be-too-hasty.html>
   - October 28, 2008: Anthony So et al., *Is Bayh-Dole Good for Developing
   Countries*, 6 PLoS Biol e262
(2008)<http://www.plosbiology.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pbio.0060262>
   - November 2008: Annette Lin et al., The Bayh-Dole Act and Promoting the
   Transfer of Technology of Publicly Funded-Research (UAEM White Paper on the
   Proposed Indian Bayh-Dole
Analogue)<http://www.essentialmedicine.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/uaem-white-paper-on-indian-bd-act.pdf>
   - November 1,  2008: Editorial: Not in public interest
(Mint)<http://www.livemint.com/2008/10/11002336/2008/11/01001052/Not-in-public-interest.html?d=2>
   - November 12, 2008: Ben Butkus, As India Mulls Bill Modeled on
   Bayh-Dole, Critics Claim It May Stifle Innovation (Biotech Transfer
Weekly)<http://www.genomeweb.com/biotechtransferweek/india-mulls-bill-modeled-bayh-dole-critics-claim-it-may-stifle-innovation>

   - December 16, 2008: Pranesh Prakash, Indian "Bayh Dole" Bill before
   Parliament (Commons
Law)<http://mail.sarai.net/pipermail/commons-law/2008-December/002973.html>
   - March 12, 2009: Feroz Ali Khader, Does patenting research change the
   culture of science? (The
Hindu)<http://www.thehindu.com/seta/2009/03/12/stories/2009031250021400.htm>
   - April 24, 2009: Sunil Abraham & Pranesh Prakash, Does India Need Its
   Own Bayh-Dole? (Indian
Express)<http://www.indianexpress.com/story-print/450560/>
   - September 21, 2009: C.H. Unnikrishnan, Proposed patent Bill is flawed,
   say experts 
(Mint)<http://www.livemint.com/2009/09/20235448/Proposed-patent-Bill-is-flawed.html?h=A1>
   - SpicyIP coverage by tag 'Bayh
Dole'<http://spicyipindia.blogspot.com/search/label/Bayh%20Dole>
   - Presentations from NUJS, Kolkata conference on the PUPFIP
Bill<http://spicyip.com/ip-resources>


On Bayh-Dole *Newspapers and Magazines*

   - Marcia Angell, The Truth About the Drug Companies, New York Review of
   Books, July 15, 2004 <http://www.nybooks.com/articles/17244>
   - Clifton Leaf, *The Law of Unintended Consequences*, Fortune Magazine,
   Sept. 19, 
2005<http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/2005/09/19/8272884/index.htm>
   - The Bayh-Dole act's 25th birthday, The Economist, Dec. 20,
2005<http://www.economist.com/science/PrinterFriendly.cfm?story_id=5327661>
   - Janet Rae-Dupree, When Academia Puts Profit Ahead of Wonder, N.Y.
   Times, Sept. 7,
2008<http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/07/technology/07unbox.html?_r=1&pagewanted=print>


*Academic Journals*

   - Amy Kapczynski et al., Addressing Global Health Inequities: An Open
   Licensing Approach for University Innovation, 20 Berkeley Tech. L.J. 1031
   (2005) <http://www.btlj.org/data/articles/20_02_02.pdf>
   - Anthony So et al., *Is Bayh-Dole Good for Developing Countries*, 6 PLoS
   Biol. e262 
(2008)<http://www.plosbiology.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pbio.0060262>
   - Arti K. Rai & Rebecca S. Eisenberg, *Bayh-Dole Reform and the Progress
   of Biomedicine*, 66 Law & Contemp. Probs. 289
(2003)<http://www.law.duke.edu/shell/cite.pl?66+Law+&+Contemp.+Probs.+289+%28WinterSpring+2003%29>
   - David C. Mowery & Arvids A. Aiedonis, *Numbers, Quality, and Entry: How
   Has the Bayh-Dole Act Affected U.S. University Patenting and Licensing?*,
   1 Innovation Pol'y Econ. 187 (2000)
   - David C. Mowery, et al., *Learning to Patent: Institutional Experience,
   Learning, and the Characteristics of U.S. University Patents After the
   Bayh-Dole Act, 1981-1992*, 48 Mgmt. Sci. 73 (2002)
   - Donald Kennedy, *Editorial: Enclosing the Research Commons*, 294
   Science 2249 (2001)
   - F.M. Scherer, *The Political Economy of Patent Policy Reform in the
   United States*, 7 Colorado J. Telecomm. High Tech. L. 167 (2009)
   - Henry Steck, *Corporatization of the University: Seeking Conceptual
   Clarity*, 585 Annals of Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. 66 (2003)
   - Jason Owen-Smith, *Trends and Transitions in the Institutional
   Environment for Public and Private Science*, 49 Higher Educ. 91 (2005)
   - Jerry G. Thursby & Marie C. Thursby, *University Licensing and the
   Bayh-Dole Act*, 301 Science 1052 (2003)
   - Jerry G. Thursby & Marie C. Thursby, *Who is Selling the Ivory Tower?
   Sources of Growth in University Licensing*, 48 Mgmt. Sci. 90 (2002)
   - Josh Lerner,* Review of 'Ivory Tower'*, 43 J. Econ. Litt. 510 (2005)
   - Joshua B. Powers,* R&D Funding Source and University Technology
   Transfer: What is Stimulating Universities to Be More Entrepreneurial?*,
   45 Research in Higher Educ. 1 (2004)
   - Lita Nelsen, *The Rise of Intellectual Property Protection in the
   American University*, 279 Science 1460 (1998)
   - Marcia Angell & Arnold S. Relman, *Patents, Profits & American
   Medicine: Conflicts of Interest in the Testing & Marketing of New Drugs*,
   131 Daedalus 102 (2002)
   - Maria Jelenik, *Review: Two Books on Technology Transfer*, 50 Admin.
   Sci. Q. 131 (2005) (Review of '*Ivory Tower*')
   - Michael A. Heller & Rebecca S. Eisenberg, Can Patents Deter Innovation?
   The Anticommons in Biomedical Research, 280 Science 698
(1998)<http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/280/5364/698>
   - Rebecca Henderson, et al., *Universities as a Source of Commercia
   Technology: A Detailed Analsis of University Patenting, 1965-1988*, 80
   Rev. Econ. Statistics 119 (1998)
   - Rebecca S. Eisenberg, *Public Research and Private Development: Patents
   and Technology Transfer in Government-Sponsorded Research*, 82 Virginia
   L. Rev. 1663 (1996)
   - Rebecca S. Eisenberg & Richard R. Nelson, *Public vs. Proprietary
   Science: A Fruitful Tension?*, 131 Daedalus 89 (2002)
   - Richard Jensen & Marie Thursby,* Proofs and Prototypes for Sale: The
   Licensing of University Inventions*, 91 Am. Econ. Rev. 240 (2001)
   - Roberto Mazzoleni & Richard R. Nelson, *Economic Theories about the
   Benefits and Costs of Patents*, 32 J. Econ. Issues 1031 (1998)
   - Thomas A. Massaro,* Innovation, Technology Transfer, and Patent Policy:
   The University Contribution*, 82 Virginia L. Rev. 1729 (1996)
   - Walter W. Powell & Jason Owen-Smith, *Universities and the Market for
   Intellectual Property in the Life Sciences*, 17 J. Pol'y Analysis Mgmt.
   253 (1998)
   - William M. Sage, *Funding Fairness: Public Investment, Proprietary
   Rights and Access to Health Care Technology*, 82 Virginia L. Rev. 1737
   (1996)
   - Zach W. Hall & Christopher Scott, *University-Industry Partnership*,
   291 Science 553 (2001)


*Resources*

   - TIIP Newsletter: Patents and University Technology Transfer (2003)
   <http://www.researchoninnovation.org/tiip/archive/issue2003_5.htm>
   - Bay-Dole 25 <http://www.bayhdole25.org/>



-- 
"[It is not] possible to distinguish between 'numerical' and 'nonnumerical'
algorithms, as if numbers were somehow different from other kinds of precise
information." - Donald Knuth

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