|  C. Tucker‘s Big Four: Patents.
 Although Tucker included patents and tariffs among his big four privileges, he approached them in a largely individualistic
                                    manner, as a source mainly of monopoly prices to the consumer. He ignored, for the most part, the effects of patents and tariffs
                                    on business structure, and their role in promoting cartelization in the late nineteenth century. Patents and tariffs, along
                                    with transportation subsidies (a form of government intervention that Tucker ignored in his own time) together laid the foundation
                                    in the late nineteenth century for what was to become twentieth century monopoly capitalism. The patent privilege has been used on a massive scale to promote concentration of capital, erect entry barriers, and maintain
                                    a monopoly of advanced technology in the hands of western corporations. It is hard even to imagine how much more decentralized
                                    the economy would be without it.  Although right-libertarians of all stripes are commonly stereotyped as apologists for big business, Murray Rothbard was
                                    not shy about denouncing patents as a fundamental violation of free market principles:  The man who has not bought a machine and who arrives at the same invention independently, will, on the free market, be
                                    perfectly able to use and sell his invention. Patents prevent a man from using his invention even though all the property
                                    is his and he has not stolen the invention, either explicitly or implicitly, from the first inventor. Patents, therefore,
                                    are grants of exclusive monopoly privilege by the State and are invasions of property rights on the market.69  It is sometimes argued, in response to attacks on patents as monopolies, that "all property is a monopoly." True, as far
                                    as it goes; but property in land, even when based on occupancy alone, is a monopoly by the nature of the case. A parcel of
                                    land can only be occupied and used by one owner at a time, because it is finite. By nature, two people cannot occupy the same
                                    physical space at the same time. "Intellectual property," in contrast, is an artificial monopoly on the right to perform a
                                    certain action--to arrange material elements or symbols in a particular configuration--which is not otherwise restricted of
                                    necessity to one person at a time. And unlike property in tangible goods and land, the defense of which is a necessary outgrowth
                                    of the attempt to maintain possession, enforcement of "property rights" in ideas requires the invasion of someone else's space. [E]veryone's property right is defended in libertarian law without a patent. If someone has an idea or plan and constructs
                                    an invention, and it is stolen from his house, the stealing is an act of theft illegal under general law. On the other hand,
                                    patents actually invade the property rights of those independent discoverers of an idea or an invention who made the
                                    discovery after the patentee….  Patents, therefore, invade rather than defend property rights.70 Patents make an astronomical price difference. Until the early 1970s, for example, Italy did not recognize drug patents.
                                    As a result, Roche Products charged the British national health a price over 40 times greater for patented components of Librium
                                    and Valium than charged by competitors in Italy.71  Patents suppress innovation as much as they encourage it. Chakravarthi Raghavan pointed out that research scientists who
                                    actually do the work of inventing are required to sign over patent rights as a condition of employment, while patents and
                                    industrial security programs prevent sharing of information, and suppress competition in further improvement of patented inventions.72
                                    Rothbard likewise argued that patents eliminate "the competitive spur for further research" because incremental innovation
                                    based on others' patents is hindered, and because the holder can "rest on his laurels for the entire period of the patent,"
                                    with no fear of a competitor improving his invention. And they hamper technical progress because "mechanical inventions
                                    are discoveries of natural law rather than individual creations, and hence similar independent inventions occur all the time.
                                    The simultaneity of inventions is a familiar historical fact."73 The intellectual property regime under the Uruguay Round of GATT goes far beyond traditional patent law in suppressing
                                    innovation. One benefit of traditional patent law, at least, was that it required an invention under patent to be published.
                                    Under U.S. pressure, however, "trade secrets" were included in GATT. As a result, governments will be required to help sup-
                                    press information not formally protected by patents.74  And patents are not necessary as an incentive to innovate. According to Rothbard, invention is motivated not only by the
                                    quasi-rents accruing to the first firm to introduce an innovation, but by the threat of being surpassed in product features
                                    or productivity by its competitors. "In active competition... no business can afford to lag behind its competitors. The
                                    reputation of a firm depends upon its ability to keep ahead, to be the first in the market with new improvements in its products
                                    and new reductions in their prices.75 This is borne out by F. M. Scherer's testimony before the FTC in 1995.76 Scherer spoke of a survey of 91 companies
                                    in which only seven "accorded high significance to patent protection as a factor in their R & D investments." Most
                                    of them described patents as "the least important of considerations." Most companies considered their chief motivation
                                    in R & D decisions to be "the necessity of remaining competitive, the desire for efficient production, and the desire
                                    to expand and diversify their sales." In another study, Scherer found no negative effect on R & D spending as a result
                                    of compulsory licensing of patents. A survey of U.S. firms found that 86% of inventions would have been developed without
                                    patents. In the case of automobiles, office equipment, rubber products, and textiles, the figure was 100%.  The one exception was drugs, in which 60% supposedly would not have been invented. I suspect either self-deception or disingenuousness
                                    on the part of the respondents, however. For one thing, drug companies get an unusually high portion of their R & D funding
                                    from the government, and many of their most lucrative products were developed entirely at government expense. And Scherer
                                    himself cited evidence to the contrary. The reputation advantage for being the first into a market is considerable. For example
                                    in the late 1970s, the structure of the industry and pricing behavior was found to be very similar between drugs with and
                                    those without patents. Being the first mover with a non-patented drug allowed a company to maintain a 30% market share and
                                    to charge premium prices.  The injustice of patent monopolies is exacerbated by government funding of research and innovation, with private industry
                                    reaping monopoly profits from technology it didn't spend a penny to develop. In 1999, extending the research and experimentation
                                    tax credit was, along with extensions of a number of other corporate tax preferences, considered the most urgent business
                                    of the Congressional leadership. Hastert, when asked if any elements of the tax bill were essential, said: "I think the
                                    [tax preference] extenders are something we're going to have to work on." Ways and Means Chair Bill Archer added,
                                    "before the year is out... we will do the extenders in a very stripped down bill that doesn't include anything else."
                                    A five-year extension of the research and experimentation credit (retroactive to 1 July 1999) was expected to cost $13.1 billion.
                                    (That credit makes the effective tax rate on R & D spending less than zero).77  The Government Patent Policy Act of 1980, with 1984 and 1986 amendments, allowed private industry to keep patents on products
                                    developed with government R & D money--and then to charge ten, twenty, or forty times the cost of production. For example,
                                    AZT was developed with government money and in the public domain since 1964. The patent was given away to Burroughs Wellcome
                                    Corp.78  As if the deck were not sufficiently stacked already, the pharmaceutical companies in 1999 actually lobbied Congress to
                                    extend certain patents by two years by a special act of private law.79  Patents have been used throughout the twentieth century "to circumvent antitrust laws," according to David Noble.
                                    They were "bought up in large numbers to suppress competition," which also resulted in "the suppression of invention
                                    itself."80 Edwin Prindle, a corporate patent lawyer, wrote in 1906:  Patents are the best and most effective means of controlling competition. They occasionally give absolute command of the
                                    market, enabling their owner to name the price without regard to the cost of production.... Patents are the only legal form
                                    of absolute monopoly.81 The exchange or pooling of patents between competitors, historically, has been a key method for cartelizing industries.
                                    This was true especially of the electrical appliance, communications, and chemical industries. G. E. and Westinghouse expanded
                                    to dominate the electrical manufacturing market at the turn of the century largely through patent control. In 1906 they curtailed
                                    the patent litigation between them by pooling their patents. G.E., in turn (later to become the patriarchal see of Gerard
                                    Swope), had been formed in 1892 by consolidating the patents of the Edison and Thomson-Houston interests.82 AT&T
                                    also expanded "primarily through strategies of patent monopoly." The American chemical industry was marginal until
                                    1917, when Attorney-General Mitchell Palmer seized German patents and distributed them among the major American chemical companies.
                                    Du Pont got licenses on 300 of the 735 patents.83 Patents are also being used on a global scale to lock the transnational corporations into a permanent monopoly of productive
                                    technology. The single most totalitarian provision of the Uruguay Round is probably its "industrial property" provisions.
                                    GATT has extended both the scope and duration of patents far beyond anything ever envisioned in original patent law. In England,
                                    patents were originally for fourteen years--the time needed to train two journeymen in succession (and by analogy, the time
                                    necessary to go into production and reap the initial profit for originality). By that standard, given the shorter training
                                    times required today, and the shorter lifespan of technology, the period of monopoly should be shorter. Instead, the U.S.
                                    seeks to extend them to fifty years.84 According to Martin Khor Kok Peng, the U.S. is by far the most absolutist
                                    of the participants in the Uruguay Round. Unlike the European Community, and for biological processes for animal and plant
                                    protection.85 The provisions for biotech are really a way of increasing trade barriers, and forcing consumers to subsidize the TNCs engaged
                                    in agribusiness. The U.S. seeks to apply patents to genetically-modified organisms, effectively pirating the work of generations
                                    of Third World breeders by isolating beneficial genes in traditonal varieties and incorporating them in new GMOs--and maybe
                                    even enforcing patent rights against the traditional variety which was the source of the genetic material. For example Monsanto
                                    has attempted to use the presence of their DNA in a crop as prima facie evidence of pirating--when it is much more likely
                                    that their variety cross-pollinated and contaminated the farmer's crop against his will. The Pinkerton agency, by the way,
                                    plays a leading role in investigating such charges--that's right, the same folks who have been breaking strikes and kicking
                                    organizers down stairs for the past century. Even jack-booted thugs have to diversify to make it in the global economy.  The developed world has pushed particularly hard to protect industries relying on or producing "generic technologies,"
                                    and to restrict diffusion of "dual use" technologies. The U. S.-Japanese trade agreement on semi-conductors, for example,
                                    is a "cartel-like, 'managed trade' agreement." So much for "free trade."86 Patent law traditionally required a holder to work the invention in a country in order to receive patent protection. U.K.
                                    law allowed compulsory licensing after three years if an invention was not being worked, or being worked fully, and demand
                                    was being met "to a substantial extent" by importation; or where the export market was not being supplied because of the patentee's
                                    refusal to grant licenses on reasonable terms.87 The central motivation in the GATT intellectual property regime, however, is to permanently lock in the collective monopoly
                                    of advanced technology by TNCs, and prevent independent competition from ever arising in the Third World. It would, as Martin
                                    Khor Kok Peng writes, "effectively prevent the diffusion of technology to the Third World, and would tremendously increase
                                    monopoly royalties of the TNCs whilst curbing the potential development of Third World technology." Only one percent of
                                    patents worldwide are owned in the Third World. Of patents granted in the 1970s by Third World countries, 84% were foreign-owned.
                                    But fewer than 5% of foreign-owned patents were actually used in production. As we saw before, the purpose of owning a patent
                                    is not necessarily to use it, but to prevent anyone else from using it.88 Raghavan summed up nicely the effect on the Third World:  Given the vast outlays in R and D and investments, as well as the short life cycle of some of these products, the leading
                                    Industrial Nations are trying to prevent emergence of competition by controlling... the flows of technology to others. The
                                    Uruguay round is being sought to be used to create export monopolies for the products of Industrial Nations, and block or
                                    slow down the rise of competitive rivals, particularly in the newly industrializing Third World countries. At the same time
                                    the technologies of senescent industries of the north are sought to be exported to the South under conditions of assured rentier
                                    income.89 Corporate propagandists piously denounce anti-globalists as enemies of the Third World, seeking to use trade barriers to
                                    maintain an affluent Western lifestyle at the expense of the poor nations. The above measures--trade barriers--to permanently
                                    suppress Third World technology and keep the South as one big sweatshop, give the lie to this "humanitarian" concern. This
                                    is not a case of differing opinions, or of sincerely mistaken understanding of the facts. Setting aside false subtleties,
                                    what we see here is pure evil at work--Orwell's "boot stamping on a human face forever." If any architects of this policy
                                    believe it to be for general human well-being, it only shows the capacity of ideology to justify the oppressor to himself
                                    and enable him to sleep at night.    |