The patent can be violated by any country given sufficient crisis etc.
2 - Given the pace of technological and industrial advance we have today there are instances where a twenty year patent is the whole life of a technology.
...Multinationals still need to be able to profit from their innovation, but the times have radically shifted and the patent laws are not functioning in the manner they were drawn up for.
Why shorten the length of time? I'm allowed to own a car I build for all my life. Why not an idea I create? We should be lengthening it.
Brighteye I dont understand how removing a limitation on the free-market is communist. In an unfettered free-market there would be no IP since the whole concept of IP is to distort the market. Clearly IP is a necessary limitation on the market, but it remains a limitation.
No, my point was that it is not a limitation, but a necessary precursor to it. It's one of the founding principles on which the market is based, not a restriction without which the market could operate freely. The market requires property before we can have a market, or else no-one will have anything to trade in the market. We can't just say that people owning property restricts the free flow of material/ideas via the market, and that therefore we should abolish property, because without property there is no market at all. Of course we could just spread the ideas, in the same way that communists want to spread the wealth, but pretending that it's not a communist concept is silly.
If you believe in patents so much let me ask if you agree with them expiring?
On death for a person, after 10 years for a company seems reasonable.
If a life can be saved, and the patent holder has lost nothing, why should a person die? That persons death benefits the holder not a jot. Why should we go out of our way, spend considerable money, time and effort to ensure that person dies?
Why are we spending money, time and effort to make the person die? The person will die if nothing is done, and will be saved if we spend money, time and effort breaking patent law and bringing the drug to him.
Why don't we do that for every person who needs the drug? Just bring him the drug, and the patent-holder has lost nothing; he wasn't going to make a sale anyway. So what if the person could pay the exorbitant prices? He clearly wasn't going to, so the patent-holder has lost nothing.
Why don't we just provide ipods at manufacturing cost to everyone who hasn't got one? We're clearly not going to buy the things, so Apple haven't lost anything.
It's simple: things decrease in value if there's a lot of them. If lots of people are getting the treatment for free that I want to charge £500 for, then I won't get my customers.
If we force some people to be my customers, but let others get it for free, then we're punishing my customers. That isn't fair, and the only justification for it is, again, the communist argument that since they have property (in this case, money) it should be taken from them. Why should the rich pay for their healthcare when the poor do not? Why should rich countries pay for the AIDS treatment of poor countries?
Your argument seems to be based not on treating people equally, but on punishing those who have, in an attempt to make everyone equal no matter the effort or fortune they have in their lives. That is the essence of communism, and it leads to people not having any effort and squandering any good fortune.
The counter balancing benefits are too great to be ignored in favour of the corporate profit gripe here. The consumer benefits greatly in this scenario, particularly in the case of drugs and the developing world. Compulsorily Licensed drug manufacturers in say Brazil can produce drugs at vastly discounted costs when compared to those in say the USA. The savings for governments, the benefits in saved lives, and the knock on effect of those people being alive and functioning in the economy in such a scenario are huge plus factors.
There are other areas to look at too, particularly with regard to stimulating innovation.
But the purpose of the market is not actually to bring the greatest good to the most people. That's the utilitarian ideal, and the market is a good approximation, but the purpose of the market is not to benefit the consumers, but to provide the best opportunity for each person to do the best for himself. If we infringe on the 'rights' of the seller in order to aid the buyer then it's just as much of an imposition on our laws as if we do the opposite.
There is no them-and-us divide in which we're all consumers and some people out there are providers. Anyone with a job is a provider of some sort in the market. Would you approve if you were forced to earn the minimum wage for the same amount of work, and were forbidden from earning more 'for the public good'? That's what you want to do for the pharmaceutical companies. You want them to earn minimum profits so that the rest of us can benefit, and it's in direct conflict with the most basic principles of the free market and a free society.
I think that it's a revolting idea, because it is based on introducing communist principles into a society that is not communist.