Should We Pay for Scientific Knowledge Spillovers? The Underappreciated Value of Failed R&D Efforts

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Abstract

Recent experience with COVID-19 has reminded us of the importance of scientific progress in enabling pharmaceutical innovation. Developing novel therapies is a highly risky but rewarding process: it not only produces innovative drugs, but also valuable scientific knowledge that benefits the community of innovators. This paper examines whether the existing reward system for pharmaceutical research and development (R&D) leads to socially optimal levels of scientific knowledge generation and sharing, with a particular focus on the value of failures in the pharmaceutical R&D efforts. We first outline a conceptual approach based on the idea that pharmaceutical R&D efforts produce both medicines and scientific knowledge, and illustrate this with some examples of how failures may generate information beneficial to concurrent and subsequent R&D efforts. We then summarize the relatively small literature on failures in pharmaceutical R&D and their impact on R&D decision making. Lastly, we discuss several market-based and nonmarket-based policy approaches that can address potential shortcomings in the current reward system which may lead to suboptimal R&D and knowledge sharing.

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APA

Xie, R. Z., Towse, A., & Garrison, L. P. (2022, March 17). Should We Pay for Scientific Knowledge Spillovers? The Underappreciated Value of Failed R&D Efforts. International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0266462322000150

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