Despite the importance of the TRIPS agreement, WTO members agreed to waive certain commitments to protect IP for COVID-19 vaccines in 2022. Now, the WTO is considering expanding that waiver to COVID-19 treatments. This would have immediate and lasting consequences for global health and America’s competitiveness, economic security and innovation leadership.
Biopharmaceutical innovators are calling on U.S. policymakers to reject an expanded IP waiver, and instead prioritize American patients, workers and innovation.
The global IP system enabled America’s world-leading biopharmaceutical industry to innovate and produce safe and effective vaccines and treatments in record time. The waiver discourages the investment necessary to develop new technologies to combat COVID-19 and future health emergencies.
PhRMA's final written submission to the U.S. International Trade Commission's (USITC)Section 332 investigation titled "COVID-19 Diagnostics and Therapeutics: Supply, Demand, and TRIPS Agreement Flexibilities."
PhRMA Vice President for International Policy Kevin Haninger prepared an oral statement for the March 30, 2023 U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC) hearing concerning its Section 332 investigation titled “COVID-19 Diagnostics and Therapeutics: Supply, Demand, and TRIPS Agreement Flexibilities.”
World Trade Organization (WTO) members are considering waiving commitments to honor certain intellectual property (IP) rights on COVID-19 treatments, following a harmful and unnecessary decision to do the same for COVID-19 vaccines. This is referred to as the TRIPS waiver. Any expansion of the TRIPS waiver would: 1.) Compromise global public health and harm patients; 2.) Cede American IP to foreign countries, sending research and manufacturing jobs overseas; 3.) Undercut American innovation and jeopardize our ability to respond to future pandemics; and 4.) Harm global collaboration and undermine U.S. leadership in the biopharmaceutical sector. Biopharmaceutical manufacturers are already sharing their IP and remain committed to providing timely global access to safe and effective COVID-19 vaccines and treatments.
Waiving commitments to protect intellectual property (IP) rights on COVID-19 technologies is unnecessary and harmful, with medicine supply far exceeding global demand. Any expansion of the TRIPS waiver would outsource America’s manufacturing jobs, weaken our biopharmaceutical leadership and undercut medical innovation. Learn more in the full report.
Across the industry, biopharmaceutical companies are working around the clock to meet the demands of COVID-19 vaccine manufacturing. Even prior to knowing the efficacy of particular vaccine candidates, companies have proactively been increasing their own manufacturing capabilities as well as partnering with other manufacturers who are sharing available capacity to support production. These partnerships have been key to manufacturing ramp-up following vaccine authorization.
Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) president and CEO Stephen J. Ubl made the following statement after the United States Trade Representative expressed support for a proposal to waive patent protections for COVID-19 medicines.
PhRMA sent a letter to President Biden on March 5, 2021, signed by 31 PhRMA board members, welcoming his Administration’s focus on the pandemic, underscoring the unprecedented collaboration underway and warning that undermining intellectual property would impede our collective response to COVID-19 and emerging variants.