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Compulsory licensure as a cost-containment measure for essential medicines: a comparative study of South Africa, the Russian Federation and the People's Republic of China

This minor dissertation investigates alternative compulsory licencing (CL) policy approaches for the South African context. The purpose is to support the country's aspirations to reform certain components of its intellectual property (IP) regime, ensuring alignment with the country's development pre...

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Main Author: Mabote, Keneilwe Lynette
Other Authors: Tong, Lee-Ann
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Intellectual Property Research Unit 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mabote, Keneilwe Lynette
author2 Tong, Lee-Ann
author_browse Mabote, Keneilwe Lynette
Tong, Lee-Ann
author_facet Tong, Lee-Ann
Mabote, Keneilwe Lynette
author_sort Mabote, Keneilwe Lynette
collection Thesis
description This minor dissertation investigates alternative compulsory licencing (CL) policy approaches for the South African context. The purpose is to support the country's aspirations to reform certain components of its intellectual property (IP) regime, ensuring alignment with the country's development prerogatives. Homing in on technical barriers with the operationalisation of the existing CL mechanism; this paper investigates remedial recommendations to support South Africa's reform efforts. The paper also hopes to gauge whether it is feasible to leverage compulsory licensure as a cost-containment tool to circumvent price dominance in the sale of essential pharmaceutical commodities. The South African Patents Law provides for CL under three grounds. These are dealt with in chapter 2. The abuse of patents rights as a result of excessive pricing is one of these grounds. Yet, attempting to use this provision abuse of patents rights is procedurally and administratively cumbersome. This is notwithstanding the litigation costs. The 2018 national IP Policy aspires to reform the CL policy to ensure that it is a 'workable mechanism'. A comparative analysis of the CL policy landscapes in the People's Republic of China (PRC) and the Russian Federation will be taken to inform South Africa's discourse. These two countries are strategic because they have either reformed and/ or in the process of renovating their intellectual property rights (IPR) landscapes and both have interesting approaches to the way in which they have reformed their CL mechanisms. The findings of this paper reveal that Russia and China have undertaken extensive IPR reforms over the last three decades. They have both taken different policy approaches in adapting their CL instruments. Russia's CL reform proposals are underway and aim to advance a CL mechanism that can effectively regulate the abuse of patents, especially for essential pharmaceutical commodities. China has installed specific Implementing Measures which offer policy guidance on the applicability CLs. In the case study of China, the Measures imposed are not necessarily advanced as cost-containment tools. Rather they support the country's pharmaceutical agenda. The recommendations in this paper offer interesting insights to the feasibility exercises that will be advanced in South Africa's IPR reform process.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher Intellectual Property Research Unit
publisherStr Intellectual Property Research Unit
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/32405 Compulsory licensure as a cost-containment measure for essential medicines: a comparative study of South Africa, the Russian Federation and the People's Republic of China Mabote, Keneilwe Lynette Tong, Lee-Ann Intellectual Property Law This minor dissertation investigates alternative compulsory licencing (CL) policy approaches for the South African context. The purpose is to support the country's aspirations to reform certain components of its intellectual property (IP) regime, ensuring alignment with the country's development prerogatives. Homing in on technical barriers with the operationalisation of the existing CL mechanism; this paper investigates remedial recommendations to support South Africa's reform efforts. The paper also hopes to gauge whether it is feasible to leverage compulsory licensure as a cost-containment tool to circumvent price dominance in the sale of essential pharmaceutical commodities. The South African Patents Law provides for CL under three grounds. These are dealt with in chapter 2. The abuse of patents rights as a result of excessive pricing is one of these grounds. Yet, attempting to use this provision abuse of patents rights is procedurally and administratively cumbersome. This is notwithstanding the litigation costs. The 2018 national IP Policy aspires to reform the CL policy to ensure that it is a 'workable mechanism'. A comparative analysis of the CL policy landscapes in the People's Republic of China (PRC) and the Russian Federation will be taken to inform South Africa's discourse. These two countries are strategic because they have either reformed and/ or in the process of renovating their intellectual property rights (IPR) landscapes and both have interesting approaches to the way in which they have reformed their CL mechanisms. The findings of this paper reveal that Russia and China have undertaken extensive IPR reforms over the last three decades. They have both taken different policy approaches in adapting their CL instruments. Russia's CL reform proposals are underway and aim to advance a CL mechanism that can effectively regulate the abuse of patents, especially for essential pharmaceutical commodities. China has installed specific Implementing Measures which offer policy guidance on the applicability CLs. In the case study of China, the Measures imposed are not necessarily advanced as cost-containment tools. Rather they support the country's pharmaceutical agenda. The recommendations in this paper offer interesting insights to the feasibility exercises that will be advanced in South Africa's IPR reform process. 2020-11-19T11:36:49Z 2020-11-19T11:36:49Z 2020 2020-11-19T08:10:51Z Master Thesis Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32405 eng application/pdf Intellectual Property Research Unit Faculty of Law
spellingShingle Intellectual Property Law
Mabote, Keneilwe Lynette
Compulsory licensure as a cost-containment measure for essential medicines: a comparative study of South Africa, the Russian Federation and the People's Republic of China
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Compulsory licensure as a cost-containment measure for essential medicines: a comparative study of South Africa, the Russian Federation and the People's Republic of China
title_full Compulsory licensure as a cost-containment measure for essential medicines: a comparative study of South Africa, the Russian Federation and the People's Republic of China
title_fullStr Compulsory licensure as a cost-containment measure for essential medicines: a comparative study of South Africa, the Russian Federation and the People's Republic of China
title_full_unstemmed Compulsory licensure as a cost-containment measure for essential medicines: a comparative study of South Africa, the Russian Federation and the People's Republic of China
title_short Compulsory licensure as a cost-containment measure for essential medicines: a comparative study of South Africa, the Russian Federation and the People's Republic of China
title_sort compulsory licensure as a cost containment measure for essential medicines a comparative study of south africa the russian federation and the people s republic of china
topic Intellectual Property Law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32405
work_keys_str_mv AT mabotekeneilwelynette compulsorylicensureasacostcontainmentmeasureforessentialmedicinesacomparativestudyofsouthafricatherussianfederationandthepeoplesrepublicofchina