[TA] | Global talk | Covid-19 demonstrates how our approach to IP threatens health, safety, and livelihoods.

Tuesday 26 | 8:00 a.m.

Miriam Brett

Common Wealth Think Tank & The Democracy Collaborative

While intended to stimulate innovation, today’s approach to IP promotes the accumulation and protection of assets by a narrow set of multinational companies, while failing to equitably develop and distribute products and services, adequately compensate workers and taxpayers, or maximize innovation. We need a new approach that recognizes how central these systems are to building a more equitable, sustainable, and democratic economy. Common Wealth and The Democracy Collaborative set out policies rooted in democratic public ownership: 

  • Grow public investment in socially and environmentally beneficial R&D:
    • Increasing public R&D investment to at least 2% of GDP over the next 10 years;
    • Reforming the tax system to improve investment;
    • Establishing public investment banks as part of an industrial strategy.
  •  Grow the public stake in creations of the mind:
    • Creation of IP Commons bodies and require that IP generated from publicly funded R&D be put into the commons;
    • Public venture capital funds to help direct innovation in key industries.
  •  Global tech transfer and reparations
    • Transferring certain IP rights, removing IP restrictions on certain critical innovations, and overhauling pro-corporate, pro-enclosure IP rules that predominate trade systems e.g., mandatory contributions to WHO Covid-19 mRNA Tech Transfer Hub and the Medicines Patent Pool of IP.
  • Ensure IP serves the common good:
    • Fair tax principles and labor practices: ending tax avoidance schemes and requiring that IP be revoked from or denied to private corporations due to labor or public good abuses be put into the commons;
    • Social and environmental returns: linking IP protections to certain public good standards (e.g., equitable access to medicines);
    • Regaining control of investment, for instance, by establishing regulations that mandate firms reinvest a certain share of profits in R&D.
  •  Challenge corporate power
    • Renegotiate trade deals that overly restrict the free flow of information and technology
    • Create public sector enterprises to diversify the landscape in concentrated, powerful industries like pharmaceuticals.

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