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POLICY IMPLICATIONS OF NEW TRENDS IN TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

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POLICY IMPLICATIONS OF NEW TRENDS IN TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER John H. Barton jbarton_at_stanford.edu OVERALL CHANGES Significantly increased technological sophistication in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: POLICY IMPLICATIONS OF NEW TRENDS IN TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER


1
POLICY IMPLICATIONS OF NEW TRENDS IN TECHNOLOGY
TRANSFER
  • John H. Barton
  • jbarton_at_stanford.edu

2
OVERALL CHANGES
  • Significantly increased technological
    sophistication in developing world e.g. Brazil,
    China, India, Thailand
  • Globalization of world economy
  • Export orientation rather than import
    substitution
  • Off-shoring of R D
  • New regulatory structure
  • TRIPS
  • Privatization and open capital markets

3
DOMINANT METHODS OF TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER
  • Global public sector gt developing nation public
    sector gt application (Cf. NIH in US)
  • Traditional agriculture
  • Some energy
  • Global private sector gt developing nation
    private (or public/private) sector gt application
    (Cf computers in US)
  • Transportation
  • Electronics
  • Pharmaceuticals

4
TWO ECONOMIC POINTS
  • S T is not a zero-sum game
  • My knowledge can contribute to yours
  • S T advance becomes an accelerator of the
    benefits of free trade
  • S T success often involves subsidies which
    are economically legitimate when responding to
  • Market failure in appropriability of technology
  • Steep learning curve even for efficient industry

5
OUTLINE OF ISSUES
  • Education and human resources
  • Public sector technology transfer
  • Private sector technology transfer

6
HUMAN RESOURCES
  • Central to both key mechanisms of technology
    transfer
  • Developing country status far better than in past
  • Human resource scientific system highly
    globalized (conferences, education, scientific
    community)

7
HUMAN RESOURCES PROBLEMS
  • Funding of advanced education
  • Failure to link education to private sector
  • Visa restrictions
  • Brain drain

8
HUMAN RESOURCES RESPONSES
  • Support for education
  • International clinical programs, particularly
    those providing business experience
  • Visa access

9
PUBLIC TECHNOLOGY
  • Economic support for subsidy
  • Basic research risk of capture by scientific
    community
  • Some applied research (agriculture, medicine, . .
    . )
  • Developing nation tendency to copy patterns of
    NIH, NSF etc.
  • Major programs in
  • Agriculture successful but underfunded
  • Medicine PPPs success to be seen
  • Energy -- fall-off in global support

10
PUBLIC TECHNOLOGY PROBLEMS
  • IP and Bayh-Dole
  • Research tool patents open-source responses
  • National security restrictions
  • Inadequate funding

11
PUBLIC TECHNOLOGY RESPONSES
  • Patent law and possible enforced licensing type
    issues
  • Agriculture
  • Research tools
  • Global research inventory World Bank?
  • Recognition of appropriate role for public sector
    subsidies
  • Ways to minimize national security limitations
  • Transnational access to research grants

12
PRIVATE TECHNOLOGY
  • Limited private sector investment by developing
    nation firms
  • Global increase in FDI in technology-based areas
  • Off-shore research by multinationals
  • Significant incentive changes with deregulation

13
PRIVATE TECHNOLOGY BARRIERS
  • TRIPS and bilateral arrangements
  • Access to technology licenses
  • Political concerns with reverse engineering
  • Trade and policy barriers to use of subsidies
  • Absence of effective international antitrust law

14
PRIVATE TECHNOLOGY RESPONSES
  • Standards for trade secrecy (employee
    obligations, reverse engineering)
  • Ways to discourage overly-strong TRIPS
    agreements
  • International antitrust arrangements
  • Trade law arrangements to facilitate appropriate
    subsidies
  • Special sector arrangements?

15
ISSUES FOR THE WORLD BANK AND DEVELOPMENT
COMMUNITIES
  • Education
  • Clinical programs
  • Global research inventory
  • Recognition of role of public sector subsidies in
    development

16
ISSUES FOR THE GENEVA COMMUNITY
  • WIPO
  • Patent law issues
  • Trade secrecy issues
  • WTO
  • Discourage overly strong TRIPS
  • Visa issues
  • National security limitations
  • Transnational access to research grants
  • Trade law arrangements to facilitate subsidies
  • Possible science/technology access agreement
  • ???
  • Patent/antitrust issues
  • Sector arrangements as in pharmaceuticals

17
MY PRIORITIES FOR THE GENEVA AGENDA
  • Short term
  • Patent law reform (WIPO)
  • Mechanisms for dealing with bilaterals (WTO Art
    XXIV or TPRM or WIPO?)
  • Longer term
  • Trade-law aspects of technology subsidies
    (Anti-dumping, countervailing duties) (WTO)
  • International patent/antitrust (WTO?)
  • Possible sector arrangement for pharmaceuticals
    (WHO?)

18
RESEARCH NEEDS
  • Most relevant to Geneva agenda
  • Studies of specific industries
  • Evaluate trade law issues
  • Evaluate patent/antitrust question
  • Most relevant to a broader development agenda
  • Studies of specific assistance programs
  • Evaluation of government interventions to
    obtain/develop technology
  • Regulation/deregulation and research incentives

19
THANK YOU!
  • jbarton_at_stanford.edu
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