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TWN Info Service on Free
Trade Agreements
01 March 2007
Malaysian Generic Drug Producers Worries Over US-Malaysia FTA
The Malaysian Organisation of Pharmaceutical Industries (MOPI) which
represents Malaysian generic medicine manufacturers, expressed concern
that longer patent duration likely to be under the US-Malaysia FTA will
benefit American drug producers who owns the patents in medicines at
the expense of Malaysian generic drug manufacturers.
As a result, Malaysians will have to pay more for medicines for a longer
period.
Below is a letter from MOPI to a local press expressing its concerns.
It was also meant to dispute the American Malaysian Chamber of Commerce’s
claim that Malaysian generic medicine manufacturers will do better if
the Malaysia-US FTA is signed.
Best wishes,
Third World Network
2-1, Jalan 31/70A
Desa Sri Hartamas
50480 Kuala Lumpur
Tel: +603-2300 2585
Fax: +603-2300 2595
email: twnkl@po.jaring.my
websites: www.twnside.org.sg and www.ftamalaysia.org
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Too big a price to pay for an FTA
28 Feb 2007
JIMMY PIONG, Vice-president, Malaysian Organisation of Pharmaceutical
Industries, Petaling Jaya
Letter to the Editor, New Straits Times
(http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/nst/Wednesday/Letters/20070228092730/Article/index_html)
THE letter from the American Malaysian Chamber of Commerce ("Generics
can expect to do much better" — NST, Feb 21) claimed that Malaysian
generic medicine manufacturers will do better if the Malaysia-United
States free trade agreement (Mufta) is signed.
Amcham purports to know what will be good for Malaysian generic companies.
However, no Malaysian generic medicine manufacturer is a member of Amcham.
The Malaysian Organisation of Pharmaceutical Industries (Mopi) represents
Malaysian generic medicine manufacturers.
Members of Amcham include US and other multinational pharmaceutical
companies who own the patents to medicines in Malaysia (98 per
cent of patents granted here are to foreigners). As owners of these
monopolies on medicines, they will be the prime beneficiaries of the
stronger intellectual property provisions likely to be in any Mufta.
Amcham claims the existing US free-trade agreements have not
harmed the generics industry.
But the reason there has been little impact so far on the overall cost
of medicines in countries that have signed US FTAs is because the stronger
intellectual property (IP) protection under US FTAs only applies to
each new medicine.
The World Health Organisation’s economic model predicts that it will
take 15 years before the full effects on overall medicine prices in
a US FTA country are felt. No US FTA with these stronger IP provisions
has been operating for as long as 15 years. The US FTAs cited have been
in force for at most three years.
However, if the Mufta is signed, based on US demands in
its other free-trade agreement, patents will last longer and US pharmaceutical
companies will get new monopolies even when there is no patent.
There will also be serious restrictions on Malaysia’s ability to issue compulsory
licences the way it successfully did in 2003.
One of Malaysia’s
largest generic manufacturers has announced it will set up its manufacturing
operations in India
because once the FTA takes effect, it would stand to lose to US-based
multinational pharmaceutical companies.
Amcham asserts that medicine prices will not increase because of a US
free-trade agreement. However, the United Nations Special Rapporteur
on the Right to Health said he was deeply concerned the US-Peru trade
agreement would lead to higher prices for essential drugs that millions
of Peruvians would find unaffordable. The provisions in the Peru-US
FTA are likely to be in Mufta.
His concerns are shared by the World Health Assembly; ministers of health
from 10 Latin American countries and the ministers of health and trade
of the African Union.
Patented medicines in Malaysia
can be 1,044 per cent more expensive than their generic equivalents,
so extensions of these monopolies under Mufta will condemn Malaysians
to paying higher prices for longer.
The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child was concerned enough about
the effect of a Mufta on medicine prices to ask our Attorney-General
how the government was going to ensure that free-trade agreements did
not interfere with the provision of generic medicines.
Amcham basically argues that stronger IP protection will increase investment.
But Malaysia’s International
Trade and Industry Minister has already said that existing IP regulations
provide adequate protection for US investors to encourage them to come
to Malaysia.
Mopi is concerned Mufta will result in delayed entry of cheaper generic
medicines and make Malaysia’s generic
manufacturers uncompetitive. Therefore, at the very least, the WHO’s
economic model of the long-term effects should be carried out and the
results released to the Malaysian public before negotiations proceed
further.
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