AOH :: CHOMSKYE.TXT
Noam Chomsky - The new World orders - From "Z Magazine"
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"These protectionist measures [...] guarantee to US pharmaceutical
corporations huge profits on drugs that are priced far beyond the
reach of taxpayers who fund the research, let alone the bulk of the
world's population. "Basic biomedical research has long been
heavily subsidized by United States taxpayers," the _New York
Times_ business pages observe, and "high-tech pharmaceuticals owe
their origin largely to these investments and to Government
scientists," funded by billions of taxpayer dollars [..]
"But drugs created through genetic engineering and other state
subsidy are priced beyond the reach of those who pay for their
development. Protection of "intellectual property" is designed to
guarantee monopoly profits to the publicly-subsidized corporations,
not to benefit those who pay; and the South must be denied the
right to produce drugs, seeds, and other necessities at a fraction
of the cost.
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22 Chomsky/Z: Year 501 (part II), Part Response 7 of 7
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The following article by Noam Chomsky appeared in:
Z Magazine, July-August 1992
and is reprinted here with the magazine's permission.
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Year 501: World Orders Old and New: Part II (PART 8 of 8; 13KB)
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6. Reshaping Industrial Policy
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The economic managers of the 1980s not only left the US with a
legacy of unprecedented debt, but also with the lowest rate of
net private investment of any major industrial economy. In
1989-90, the US fell behind Japan in the absolute level of
industrial investment, with a population twice as large. The US
position in traditional high-tech industry also declined
severely. <<<NB: Wachtel, _op. cit._, "afterword"; John Zysman,
"US power, trade and technology," _International Affairs_
(London), Jan. 1991.>>>
For forty years, US industrial policy has been based on the
Pentagon system, which provided a regular stimulus to high
technology production and a state-guaranteed market to cushion
management decisions. With Soviet power a reality, it was always
possible to concoct "missile gaps," "windows of vulnerability,"
and other threats to our existence when needed. These forms of
massive state intervention in the economy provided the US with a
comfortable lead in the advanced sectors of technology. But the
pretexts are now gone, and new devices are needed.
At the same time, the cutting edge is shifting towards other
areas, notably biotechnology. Like other competitive sectors of
the economy, the pharmaceutical and health industries and
agribusiness have always benefited from a crucial state-organized
subsidy for research, development, and marketing. These areas
are now gaining a greater role in planning for the years ahead.
In the early postwar years, research would "spin off" electronics
and computer firms, creating new opportunities for enrichment for
engineers, scientists and entrepeneurs. Today, biotech firms are
springing up around the same research institutions, by rather
similar mechanisms.
The US National Institutes of Health are engaged in what the
_Wall Street Journal_ calls "the biggest race for property
since the great land rush of 1889," in this case, "staking U.S.
patent claims to thousands of pieces of genetic material -- DNA
-- that NIH scientists are certain are fragments of unknown
genes." The purpose, the NIH explains, is to ensure that US
corporations dominate the biotechnology business, which the
government expects "to be generating annual revenue of $50
billion by the year 2000," and vastly more beyond. A recent
patent for a basic human blood cell could allow a California
company to "corner the market for a broad array of life-saving
technologies," to cite merely one example. The biotech business
took off after a 1980 Supreme Court decision granting a patent
for an oil-dissolving microorganism developed through genetic
engineering, the _Journal_ observes.
The prospects are considered to be expansive. To convey a sense
of the prospects, one researcher remarks that some way down the
road, parents might even have to pay royalties for having
children. Medical procedures such as bone-marrow transplants and
gene-based therapies will also be protected by patent. The same
could be true of engineered animals, seeds, and other organisms.
We are now speaking of control of the essentials of life. By
comparison, electronics deals with mere
conveniences. <<<NB: Michael Waldholz and Hilary Stout, "Rights
to
Life," _WSJ_, April 7, 1992.>>>
These developments give new urgency to the US demand for
increased protection for "intellectual property" -- crucially
including patents -- at the ongoing GATT negotiations. These
protectionist measures are needed to ensure that US corporations
dominate the health and agricultural industries, thus controlling
the essentials for human life; and to guarantee to US
pharmaceutical corporations huge profits on drugs that are priced
far beyond the reach of taxpayers who fund the research, let
alone the bulk of the world's population. "Basic biomedical
research has long been heavily subsidized by United States
taxpayers," the _New York Times_ business pages observe, and
"high-tech pharmaceuticals owe their origin largely to these
investments and to Government scientists," funded by billions of
taxpayer dollars for the National Institutes of Health and for
University research. But drugs created through genetic
engineering and other state subsidy are priced beyond the reach
of those who pay for their development. Protection of
"intellectual property" is designed to guarantee monopoly profits
to the publicly-subsidized corporations, not to benefit those who
pay; and the South must be denied the right to produce drugs,
seeds, and other necessities at a fraction of the cost.
On similar grounds, the US has refused to sign a treaty on
preserving the world's biological species. The Assistant
Secretary of State for the Environment, Curtis Bohlen, said that
the treaty "fails to give adequate patent protection to American
companies that transfer biotechnology to developing companies,"
and "tries to regulate genetically engineered materials, a
competitive area in which the United States leads," the _New
York Times_ reports. <<<NB: Fazlur Rahman, _NYT_, April 26;
William Stevens, _NYT_, May 24, 1992.>>>
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