Welfare effect of market exclusivity extension for patented medicines in Thailand: analysis of the effect of TRIPS-Plus provisions

Under the free trade agreement negotiations with the United States and the European Union, Thailand, along with several developing countries, is required to enforce TRIPS-Plus provisions. Most developing countries claim that stringent intellectual property protection for pharmaceuticals would result...

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Main Author: Theerathorn Yoongthong
Other Authors: Mahidol University. Institute for Population and Social Research
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2017
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/3301
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spelling th-mahidol.33012023-04-12T15:20:52Z Welfare effect of market exclusivity extension for patented medicines in Thailand: analysis of the effect of TRIPS-Plus provisions Theerathorn Yoongthong Mahidol University. Institute for Population and Social Research Free Trade Agreement TRIPS TRIPS-Plus intellectual property protection patented medicines consumer welfare Journal for Population and Social Studies วารสารประชากรและสังคม Under the free trade agreement negotiations with the United States and the European Union, Thailand, along with several developing countries, is required to enforce TRIPS-Plus provisions. Most developing countries claim that stringent intellectual property protection for pharmaceuticals would result in considerably higher prices for medicines, with adverse consequences for the health and well-being of their citizens. This paper empirically assesses the basis of these claims. Using a detailed product-level data set from Thailand, we estimate demand-side parameters together with key price and expenditure elasticities for a set of three main categories of antihypertensive drugs. We then use these estimates to carry out counterfactual simulations of what consumer welfare would have been, had Thailand enforced TRIPS-Plus. According to our estimation, the enforcement of TRIPS-Plus would result in a substantial accumulated consumer welfare loss to the Thai economy, ranging between 30 billion baht and 136 billion baht, within a 10-year period from 2012 to 2021. The magnitude of consumer welfare loss suggests that without clear and inclusive evidence regarding the merits of TRIPS-Plus in every aspect, Thailand should not accept any further intellectual property protection beyond the TRIPS mandates. 2017-12-20T08:29:30Z 2017-12-20T08:29:30Z 2017-12 2015-07 Article Journal for Population and Social Studies. Vol.23, No.2 (2015), 193-213 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/3301 eng Mahidol University Institute for Population and Social Research. Mahidol University application/pdf
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
language English
topic Free Trade Agreement
TRIPS
TRIPS-Plus
intellectual property protection
patented medicines
consumer welfare
Journal for Population and Social Studies
วารสารประชากรและสังคม
spellingShingle Free Trade Agreement
TRIPS
TRIPS-Plus
intellectual property protection
patented medicines
consumer welfare
Journal for Population and Social Studies
วารสารประชากรและสังคม
Theerathorn Yoongthong
Welfare effect of market exclusivity extension for patented medicines in Thailand: analysis of the effect of TRIPS-Plus provisions
description Under the free trade agreement negotiations with the United States and the European Union, Thailand, along with several developing countries, is required to enforce TRIPS-Plus provisions. Most developing countries claim that stringent intellectual property protection for pharmaceuticals would result in considerably higher prices for medicines, with adverse consequences for the health and well-being of their citizens. This paper empirically assesses the basis of these claims. Using a detailed product-level data set from Thailand, we estimate demand-side parameters together with key price and expenditure elasticities for a set of three main categories of antihypertensive drugs. We then use these estimates to carry out counterfactual simulations of what consumer welfare would have been, had Thailand enforced TRIPS-Plus. According to our estimation, the enforcement of TRIPS-Plus would result in a substantial accumulated consumer welfare loss to the Thai economy, ranging between 30 billion baht and 136 billion baht, within a 10-year period from 2012 to 2021. The magnitude of consumer welfare loss suggests that without clear and inclusive evidence regarding the merits of TRIPS-Plus in every aspect, Thailand should not accept any further intellectual property protection beyond the TRIPS mandates.
author2 Mahidol University. Institute for Population and Social Research
author_facet Mahidol University. Institute for Population and Social Research
Theerathorn Yoongthong
format Article
author Theerathorn Yoongthong
author_sort Theerathorn Yoongthong
title Welfare effect of market exclusivity extension for patented medicines in Thailand: analysis of the effect of TRIPS-Plus provisions
title_short Welfare effect of market exclusivity extension for patented medicines in Thailand: analysis of the effect of TRIPS-Plus provisions
title_full Welfare effect of market exclusivity extension for patented medicines in Thailand: analysis of the effect of TRIPS-Plus provisions
title_fullStr Welfare effect of market exclusivity extension for patented medicines in Thailand: analysis of the effect of TRIPS-Plus provisions
title_full_unstemmed Welfare effect of market exclusivity extension for patented medicines in Thailand: analysis of the effect of TRIPS-Plus provisions
title_sort welfare effect of market exclusivity extension for patented medicines in thailand: analysis of the effect of trips-plus provisions
publishDate 2017
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/3301
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