The problem with your analogy is that India is not suffering under the disease that Nexavar was created to combat. Am not saying that the disease does not exist in India. Am saying that the disease is not epidemic like the plague or a famine or a long drought. If we are debating in the theoretical, then on the same theoretical plane, these diseases existed long before the scientific method that gave us companies like Bayer.
If India does not have access to Nexavar today, just like how India and the rest of the world did not even have Nexavar let alone access to it yesterday, then India and the Indian people will survive in spite of the kidney cancer because unlike a drought, only a few people will have kidney cancer or flat feet or a cleft palate or mental health issues.
Then on that same theoretical plane, we have a conflict of moral obligations. Bayer is ultimately morally obligated to itself in trying to recoup its investments by the only way it knows how: price. India is morally obligated to care for its citizens in the only way it know how: confiscation.
Another flawed argument.
In any relationship, my freedom ends where another's nose begins. Ever heard of that?
This is a two-way street. If I am restrained from swinging my arm for fear of hitting you, aka violating your rights and freedoms, the reciprocal applies to you as well. Just because I cut 10 cords of wood, an excess to keep myself warm, that does not give you, who cut only 1 cord of wood, to take 4 from me in order to even out our resources. If you can convince me to VOLUNTARILY give you 4 cords of wood, that would be a different issue.
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Shall india wait to become epidemic then call it bayer to reduce price ?
Recover investment but at not cost of peoples life...
instead of 5 yrs it will take 8- 10 yrs to recover cost..
-my freedom ends where another's nose begins
true..
-Wood argument.
you cut 10 cord. ok .. good for yourself..
then me only 1.. then i should convenience you to give me 4 .. as u work hard for those 10 right..
then you may voluntarily give me ..ok
lets put argument on same case
bayer produce medicine with huge cost and effort.. good ..
they introduced in india at their price .. (10 cord ) with duty to comply indian norms
now our pharma industry (only 1 cord)
now india have 2 option
1. either request to bayer
2. work under legal framework
1.indian govt told bayer to implement plan so that needy patient will get those medicine .. bayer did not complied .. link in my previous post..
2. then india went under WTO norms to take 4 cords which okeeyd by international community.
either bayer is right and international community is wrong as they allowed CL (compulsory licensing )
there are nation who talk in WTO , UN.. they are much much clever than us and have access to more data ..
if they allowed CL it means even at CL level- royalty - the parent will be benefited...
Do you think US,Uk,german govt so naive that they will sacrifices such a large business.. you decide..
develop nation as you said take resource from nature then when time to pay back they just ran away .. climate change and kyoto protocol
Summary.
Indian CL may be hampering IPR of some organization . Accepted.
But see the objective of it.. to make a profit or for saving life..
nation who agreed for CL aware about it .. they took decision based on mutual benefit.. no nation does charity... its always give and take
so even in CL pharma companies who seems to be loosing will be gaining something ...