Briefing Papers Number 5, August 2008 | Página 6

to make TRIPS more development-friendly. The Doha Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health, signed at the outset of the Doha Round, recognized that TRIPS “should be interpreted and implemented in a manner supportive of WTO members’ rights to protect public health and, in particula r, to promote access to medicines for all.” In 2005, WTO members reached a final agreement on a modified version of TRIPS that would make it easier for developing countries to import cheaper generic equivalents of lifesaving medicines. Canada, Norway, and the member nations of the European Union are using TRIPS as the framework for their own domestic intellectual property laws. In sharp contrast, the United States has enacted more restrictive intellectual property rights laws through bilateral trade agreements that contain “TRIPS-plus” provisions. The North American Free Trade Agreement, for example, does not offer flexibility to modify or suspend patents or patent rules in cases of public health emergencies. Under the free trade agreement (FTA) between the United States and Jordan, obtaining a license for domestic manufacture of generic drugs is more difficult than it is under TRIPS.33 Similar provisions have been included in bilateral FTAs between the United States and Singapore, Morocco, Vietnam, and a host of other developing countries. Such policies make it more difficult for poor people to obtain essential medicines. It is important for the United States to provide developing countries with the flexibility they need to ensure that people get affordable access to essential medicines. Achieving a balance between efforts to protect intellectual property and efforts to fight deadly infectious diseases will require that the United States: • Coordinate trade and development policies to ensure access to medicines. All trade agreements signed by the United States should provide the flexibility needed to ensure access to essential medicines. • Promote TRIPS, not TRIPS plus. The United States should follow the lead of other countries and make TRIPS the standard for intellectual property rights rather than a platform to add additional requirements. Conclusion The United States provides strong leadership on development assistance, but there is room to do more. Commitment to development should extend to trade, migration, intellectual property rights, and other areas. Reforming U.S. foreign assistance can help achieve the goal of aligning development with other policies that matter to development. Currently, the highest levels of the U.S. government do not have a clear way to see or focus on the impact of our combined policies on the world’s poorest 6  Briefing Paper, August 2008 people. The U.S. Agency for International Development is not empowered to call for the changes needed in areas such as trade or migration. Creating more coherent policies for development requires strong leadership from an individual or agency empowered to work across agencies and departments. The United States needs to refocus foreign assistance on poverty reduction and allot resources equal to the task. It needs to consolidate development programs in one place with a clear mandate. And it needs to ensure that all policies that impact developing countries help rather than harm them. These actions will contribute to global development by investing U.S. tax dollars effectively in reaching the people who need it most. The Transfer of Technology Millennium Development Goal Eight (Develop a Global Partnership for Development) calls for developed countries to share important technologies with developing countries, another example of a partnership that could dramatically improve development prospects for poor people. One area where technology transfer will play an increasingly important role is climate change. A recent report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) notes that developing countries will be disproportionately affected by global warming, particularly countries in sub-Saharan Africa. Helping these countries mitigate the harmful effects of climate change will require significant resources and technologies. The technologies might include improved cropping methods, seeds, fertilizers, irrigation systems, and cultivation techniques. Strategies to improve forest management and management of other sensitive ecosystems are also important. A model for successful transfer of agricultural technologies already exists: the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), a consortium of fifteen international agricultural research centers. Funded mainly by developed countries, CGIARaffiliated research centers have helped to develop and disseminate key agricultural technologies. These technologies played a central role in Asia’s Green Revolution of the 1960s and 1970s, lifting hundreds of millions of people out of hunger and poverty. As the IPCC report notes, “No single technology can provide all of the mitigation potential in any sector.”34 The goal of technology transfer should be to provide developing countries with options to manage climate change and achieve sustainable development.