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The impact and management of biotech on developing countries

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David Zilberman, University of California Gregory Graff, University of California Matin Qaim, University of Bonn Cherisa Yarkin, University of California – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The impact and management of biotech on developing countries


1
The impact and management of biotech on
developing countries
  • David Zilberman, University of California
  • Gregory Graff, University of California
  • Matin Qaim, University of Bonn
  • Cherisa Yarkin, University of California

2
Presumed Points of Failure
  • Productivity Biotechnology aims to solve
    problems of the North will not make a difference
    in the South.
  • Access Biotechnology is controlled by
    corporations will not be accessible on feasible
    terms to poor peasants.
  • Risks Damage to environment and human health,
    contamination of native genetic materials, and
    loss of crop biodiversity

3
Ag biotech and development
  • Ag biotech was developed in the north, with
    application to crop and varieties of developed
    countries
  • It mostly served to reduce pesticides use and
    improve profitability.
  • Is the first generation of biotech appropriate to
    developing countries
  • -will it increase yields?
  • How will it affect crop biodiversity?
  • We will address these issues here

4
Theory Impacts of ag biotechnology vary
  • The impacts of ag biotechnology on yield depends
    on
  • where it is applied
  • How it is applied
  • What was used before
  • The management of the crop before and with
    biotech depend on
  • socio economic situations and
  • institutional arrangement associate with
    biotechnology
  • Two important factor
  • The extent of use of chemicals
  • The varieties that are being modified

5
Productivity Yield-Increasing Potential
  • Yield potential output x (1 - damage)
  • damage f (pest, pest control)
  • Combination of high pest pressure and minimal
    existing use of pest control ? potential for
    yield-increasing effect
  • Attractive features of pest-control agricultural
    biotechnologies
  • Simplicity of use
  • Reduction in use of chemicals or labor
  • Expansion of weather conditions where crop grow

6
Technology, variety changes and yield effect
  • Adoption of GMO may entail a switch from local
    variety to generic variety
  • This switch may reduce yields
  • Yield gain Reduction of pest damage of generic
    variety
  • - Difference in net yield between traditional
    and generic

7
Example 1
  • Potential yield local variety 4 ton/ hectare
  • Potential Yield generic variety 3 tons/ hectare
  • Damage 50
  • Bt reduce damage by 100
  • Yield effect of modified local variety
  • 4 - 4(1 - .5) 2
  • Yield effect of generic variety
  • 3 - 2 1

8
Productivity Evidence for Bt Cotton Gains
  • Bt cotton in
  • United States yield effect 0 15
  • China yield effect 10
  • South Africa yield effect 20-40
  • India yield effect 60 80
  • In every country have reduction in chemical usage

9
Some Indian Stories
  • Field trials in 2001-2 has yield effect of 80
    with generic variety and 87 with local GMV
  • Pesticides use decline by 70
  • No wonder yield loss can be 60
  • In 2002-3 when actual cotton was planted yield
    effect was between -10-30
  • Law pest pressure
  • In some locations a wrong variety was introduced
  • The yield gain in 2003-4 was higher-higher pet
    damage

10
Robin hood and GMV
  • In Gujjarat a local breeder introduced illegally
    Bt cotton with spectacular result
  • A unholy alliance of environmentalists and
    companies wanted the cotton to be burned
  • Farmer demonstrated and the cotton saved and Bt
    legalized

11
Bt as insurance
  • It is meaningless tp speak about yield effect
    since pest damage is a random variable and yield
    effect varies
  • A switch to generic GMV may reduce yield in a
    good year but increase it substantially in a bad
    one
  • Bt increases mean yield but reduces variance and
    especially down side risk-where pesticides are
    costly and yield losses still may result in
    bankruptcy

12
Example 2
Potential yield 6 local variety 4 generic
variety Damage 25 with 50 probability 50
with 50 probability Bt eliminates pest damage
Adoption of generic Bt Reduces yield from 4.5
to 4 with 50 probability Increases yield from
3.0 to 4 with 50 probability Adoption of local
Bt Increases yield from 4.5 to 6 with 50
probability Increases yield from 3.0 to 6 with
50 probability
13
Biotech risk and farm size
  • The gain in terms of risk bearing cost is main
    reason for adoption even in US
  • Small farmers that have little access to
    insurance and formal credit market may be
    beneficial of lower risk
  • Seed technology has minimal economics of scale,
    reduce need to invest in pest control equipment
    and reduce monitoring time- thus may be appealing
    to small farmer if affordable and Modification is
    done with a good variety

14
Predicted yield effects of pest controlling
Biotech
15
More complete view of adoption
  • Farmers may be risk averse- they consider the
    both the mean and risk effects of new GMVs
  • They consider local GMV and generic GMVs
  • Credit availability is a constraint
  • Heterogeneity within and between farms is a
    reason of differentiated behavior
  • We may see
  • Full adoption/Diversification
  • Expansion to areas where the crop is not grown
  • Change in economics of insurance

16
Access
  • Intellectual Property Rights (IPR)
  • Registrations

17
Access Biotechnologies in the South
  • Most IP is generated by research in the North
  • Transfer of public sectors rights to the private
    sector provides incentives for development and
    commercialization
  • Companies have little incentive to invest in
    applications specific to the South

18
Access Biotechnologies in the South
  • Companies are willing to give technologies for
    use in South good PR
  • Companies worry about liability, transaction
    costs
  • Universities with rights to technology will also
    be open to transferring to South applications
  • Needed institutional mediation IP clearinghouse

19
Access Objectives of clearinghouse for IPR
  • Reduce search costs to identifying set of
    technologies accessible
  • Reduce transaction cost for the commercialization
    of innovations
  • Increase transparency about ownership of IPR
  • Provide mechanisms to manage negotiation of
    access to IPR
  • Improve technology transfer mechanisms and
    practices (mostly in public sector institution)

20
Access Model of a clearinghouse for IPR
Member organizations
IP providers
Non-member organizations
Direct licensing transactions
Assignment, license, or option for full or
limited fields of use
Re-packaging
Pooled sub-licensing
Single patent sub-licensing
IP users
Non-member IP users
Non-member IP users
Member organization IP users
21
Access Reducing Regulatory Constraints
  • Registration should be efficient. Excessive
    requirements may be used as a source of political
    economic rent seeking.
  • Borders are arbitrary. Countries can take
    advantage of regulatory clearances granted
    elsewhere and concentrate on addressing unique
    local problems and risks.
  • Countries should develop regional alliances for
    regulation and establish mechanisms for easy
    transfer of regulatory information.

22
Regulatory design-tougher is not better
  • Regulation has a role risk control and screening
  • Post regulation monitoring can correct
    mistakes-irreversibility happens -but not always
  • Tough regulation may lead to
  • Concentration
  • Delay of introduction of technologies
  • Reduced research and investment and retardation
    of technology
  • Need to optimize regulation

23
Impacts of regulation strategies
  • For plant that reproduce sexually- once a GMV
    variety is developed(an event) the gene is
    inserted to others through back crossing
  • Tough regulation of each variety lead to reduce
    choice and switching away from local varieties-a
    small number of varieties will be used and much
    of the potential of innovation lost
  • Regulations of events increase choice -cost of
    modifying specific varieties smaller

24
Regulation and pace of change
  • Varieties may change rather fast with
    conventional breeding
  • Slow regulatory process may result in insertion
    of GMVs in older varieties and loss of benefits
    obtained through conventional breeding-
  • Slow regulatory process slow innovation as it is
    reducing returns to and thus investment in
    innovation

25
Environment
  • Risks
  • Agricultural biodiversity

26
Environment Sound Basis for Risk Analysis
  • Is the Precautionary Principle a sound basis for
    risk analysis?
  • There are always trade-offs between risks and
    benefits, and between risks and risks.
  • In Africa, does risk of genetic contamination
    exceed risk of starvation?
  • Agricultural biotechnology should be evaluated in
    comparison to pesticides and other real
    alternatives.
  • In tropics, increased productivity would reduce
    pressure for deforestation.

27
Bio tech and environment
  • GMO leads to gains in terms of pesticides use
    reduction and reduce acreage as yields increase
  • Gene flow is a potential problem- need to be
    monitored
  • The risk depends on the gene inserted-Bt and
    vitamin C producing genes may be rather benign -
    but genes can produce toxins-regulations should
    vary

28
Gmos are not perfect-
  • Gmos have problems-resistance buildup, damage to
    secondary pests, genetic contamination.
  • Refugia, monitoring of impacts, restriction of
    use in some locations can address these problems
    partially-but alternatives have problems and
    risks that have to be considered.
  • Agricultural biotech is in its infancy- built up
    of human capital and accumulation of -will lead
    to eliminations of many bug and lead to better
    technologies

29
Environment Sound Basis for Risk Analysis
  • Risks and benefits should be quantified.
  • Sound reliability factorsi.e. confidence
    intervalsshould be used to standardize risk
    estimates.

30
Environment Relative to Modern Breeding Biotech
Can Enhance Crop Biodiversity
  • Main premise Agbiotech allows minor modification
    of existing varieties and under appropriate
    institutional setup can be adopted while
    preserving crop biodiversity
  • Conventional breeding involves often massive
    genetic changes, and adjustments to accommodate
    biodiversity are costly and
  • Well functioning IPR system can lead to crop
    biodiversity preservation
  • Field data support this claim

31
Table 1. Number of available varieties for
different GM technologies in selected countries
(2001/2002)
32
Environment Biodiversity scenarios in the field
  • Strong IPRs, strong breeding sector, and low
    transaction costs. (US) Private technology owner
    will license the innovation to different seed
    companies, who incorporate it into many or all
    crop varieties, so that crop biodiversity is
    preserved.
  • Strong IPRs, strong breeding sector, but high
    transaction costs. (EU) If an agreement cannot be
    reached, companies will bypass breeding sector,
    directly introduce GM crop varieties that are not
    locally adapted.

33
Environment Biodiversity scenarios in the field
  • Weak IPRs and a strong breeding sector. (China)
    Many different GM varieties are available Farmers
    and consumers are beneficiaries. SR social
    optimum.
  • Weak IPRs and a weak breeding sector. (Africa) If
    foreign GM crop varieties are even introduced,
    are done directly without adaptation. A loss of
    local crop biodiversity.

34
Biotech Could Enhance Crop Biodiversity
  • Conventional breeding led to wholesale
    replacement of land races with elite line
    monocultures
  • Biotechnology could provide precise improvements
    to traditional land races
  • Could lead to reintroduction of new
    technologically competitive land races -
    Jurasic garden

35
Conclusions
  • Agbiotechnology has significant potential for
    developing countries the challenge is to realize
    that potential
  • Productivity yield effect of biotechnology tends
    to be larger in developing countries
  • Access institutions can reduce IP and regulatory
    costs for developing countries
  • Risks crop biodiversity can be preserved and
    could even be restored with biotechnology

36
Ag bio tech is only part of the solution
  • Ag biotech is more than Gmos.
  • It will evolve- alternative molecular approaches
    will be developed-but
  • knowledge will not be accumulated without
    experience
  • Development may be dependent on public and
    private sector funding
  • Ag biotech must be pursued as part of a portfolio
    of technology and knowledge tools aiming to
    enhance productivity and environmental
    sustainability of agriculture.

37
Consider
  • 250 million Americans are the guinea pigs for
    agricultural biotechnology. Northern countries
    also took the risk with cars and with modern
    chemicals.
  • Africa missed the Green Revolution will it also
    miss the Gene Revolution?

38
Epilog Differences in attitudes US vs EU- is
it consumers attitudes?
  • U.S. relative advantage in Biotech threatens
    European dominance in chemical pest control
    markets

39
Innovative capacity Forward citations to US
agbiotech patents
By nationality of lead inventor and grant date of
cited patent
North American
European
Japanese
40
Innovative capacity Forward citations to US
agrochemical patents
By nationality of lead inventor and grant date of
cited patent
North American
European
Japanese
41
Market incentives Global crop protection
market, sales US millions
agchem
agbio/ seed
Others
Japanese corporations
agchem
US corporations
agbio/ seed
European corporations
agchem
Data Sources Wood Mackenzie Agrochemicals, in
Chemistry Industry, November 1993 and Phillips
McDougall, AgriFutura Newsletter, March 2002
42
Innovative capacity comparing citation based
indices of patent quality
43
Behavioral evidenceDouble standards for the
precautionary principle?
  • Double standards applied to intra-EU trade
    relations and external EU trade relations
    (Majone, 2003)
  • As applied to chemicals vs. biotechnologies?
  • Possible metrics?
  • Sources?

44
Behavioral evidenceConspicuous industry absence
from policy process?
  • When GM products came to the market in Europe,
    we were faced with contradictory statements or
    even silence both from regulators and from
    industry. This contributed substantially to the
    lack of confidence now present.

- Dirk-Arie Toet Nestec Ltd., 2001
45
The US and EU can fight over control of Pest
control markets Developing countries should not
pay the price
China and India will benefit from biotech- But
what about Africa?
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