Globalization, pharmaceutical pricing, and South African health policy: Managing confrontation with US firms and politicians

被引:50
作者
Bond, P [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Witwatersrand, Grad Sch Publ & Dev Management, ZA-2050 Wits, South Africa
来源
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH SERVICES | 1999年 / 29卷 / 04期
关键词
D O I
10.2190/4MA6-53E3-LE1X-C1YY
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Brewing since the advent of South African democracy in 1994 and promises of health sector transformation, an extraordinary drug war between President Nelson Mandela's African National Congress government and U.S. pharmaceutical manufacturers took on global proportions in 1998-1999. Within months of the passage of South African legislation aimed at lowering drug prices, the U.S. government quickly applied powerful pressure points to repeal a clause allowing potential importation of generic substitutes and imposition of compulsory licensing. At stake were not only local interpretations of patent law and World Trade Organization rules on Trade in Intellectual Property, but international power relations between developing countries and the pharmaceutical industry. In reviewing the ongoing debate, this article considers post-apartheid public health policy, U.S. government pressure to change the law, and pharmaceutical industry interests and links to the U.S. government, and evaluates various kinds of resistance to U.S. corporate and government behavior. The case thus raises-not for the first time-concerns about contemporary imperialism ("globalization"), the role of the profit motive as an incentive in vital pharmaceutical products, and indeed the depth of "democracy" in a country where high-bidding international drug firms have sufficient clout to embarrass Vice President Al Gore by pining him against the life-and-death interests of millions of consumers of essential drugs in South Africa and other developing countries.
引用
收藏
页码:765 / 792
页数:28
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] [Anonymous], 1998, WIDER ANN LECT HELS
  • [2] [Anonymous], 1989, ANTI SYSTEMIC MOVEME
  • [3] ASSAVANONDA A, 1998, BANGKOK POST 0908
  • [4] BAILEY H, 1999, CTR RESPONSIVE POLIT, V5
  • [5] BALE H, 1999, E COMMUNICATION 0415
  • [6] BARBER S, 1998, BUSINESS DAY 0715
  • [7] BARBER S, 1998, BUSINESS DAY 0720
  • [8] The state of neoliberalism in South Africa: Economic, social, and health transformation in question
    Bond, P
    Pillay, YG
    Sanders, D
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH SERVICES, 1997, 27 (01): : 25 - 40
  • [9] BOND P, 1999, ELITE TRANSITION APA
  • [10] BOND P, 1998, JOHANNESBURG SU 1220