CARICOM, The Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement, And Intellectual Property Law And Policy: What Next?
By Abiola Inniss
The year 2015 has dawned as usual with the fanfare of greater things to come. Caribbean projects are in the pipeline, along with activities to enhance competitiveness and many gallant efforts by well- meaning non-governmental and International organizations. The research has shown, however, that without the impetus of effort that originates from amongst the local innovators, there is no real change and no great advancement.
The efforts
of some regional establishments such as Compete Caribbean in instituting
projects which should help in promoting and developing trade and investments
,as well as in providing some solid knowledge-based platforms from which policy
initiatives can be launched, are laudable, but what next?
There is
still little response from Caricom on intellectual property laws and policy
which will allow for the development of innovation and trade both intra-regionally
and internationally, and one wonders whether this is the result of lack of
informed policymakers or simply a collective phobia of international
intellectual property law and policy. Either way there must be an applicable
cure and fast.
The history
of international Intellectual property regimen in developing countries reveals
that they have faced a barrage of international pressures concerning their
implementation of the Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights agreement
(TRIPS), which is an integral part of World Trade Organization (WTO) trade
accords made by them.
Among the
stresses exerted on the countries have been WTO accession agreements, trade
sanctions and threats of sanctions, withdrawal of aid, diplomatic intimidation,
economic threats from large industrial groupings and bilateral trade
negotiations.
Developing
countries have had mixed responses to these threats. In some instances they
have tried to resist many of these pressures, and this has resulted in low
levels of implementation of TRIPS. In others, there has been hasty
implementation of laws as a peace offering to the developed country bloc, which
has not balanced the interests of local economic and social policy needs resulting
in chaos. Kenya’s IP system is an example of this.
The top-down system of intellectual property
regimen cannot work within developing countries without serious reworking and
consideration, and although there is considerable argument for the so-called TRIPS
flexibilities which are intended to give developing countries some leeway in
the implementation of the laws relating to TRIPS, the point is that implemented
they must be. Commentators who argue strenuously for TRIPS flexibilities seem
to miss the point that it is the rules which are themselves problematic, not
how or when they are implemented.
And what of
Caricom? The aspirations to a Single Market and Economy carries with it the
recognition that there must be adequate responses to the requirements of the
world economic order and conditions, whatever those may be. It is a fact of our
current existence that the world economy is now heavily based on cyber
technologies which eliminate older slower processes, shift trans-national
transactions to the internet, and create new and ever-evolving industries which
are propelling developing countries which care to be involved, into
technological and economic dominance. Singapore, China, India, Malaysia, Brazil
and some others are a competitive presence on the world stage to the point where
they can no longer be ignored, to
this end The United States has been actively working on the Trans-Pacific
Partnership Agreement (TPP) with 11 other countries, namely Peru, Singapore,
Mexico, Malaysia, Chile, Japan, Canada, Australia, Brunei Darussalem, and
Vietnam.
The aim of
this agreement is to provide market access for goods made in America, implement
new rules for state owned enterprises, have strong environmental commitments
and labour standards and most notably to have a strong intellectual property
rights framework. This indicates above all else that there is great urgency in
the need to regulate the international intellectual property rights space in a
way that has not been possible through TRIPS, and also opens the space for
Caricom to evolve its own framework which will take advantage of this new era.
One cannot
but take notice that the United States has completely ignored Caricom in these
discussions, indicating that the region is not to be taken seriously in these
kinds of international arrangements, with the result that Caricom and its
Caricom Single Market and Economy (CSME) will be on the receiving end of
whatever trade deals and intellectual property rights agreements result from
this new arrangement with no way out.
Perhaps it
is the intention of the Caricom policymakers that the region become the sun,
sand and sea playground of the rest of the world , but even here it is doomed
to failure because there are substantial resources in this regard in many other
parts of the world. Caricom needs to rework its policies and get to work on
becoming a respected voice in the international sphere. It is time to get busy
in the world of international intellectual property.
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