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July 2002
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Biotech in Texas
In April 2002 the Dallas Fed had a very
successful conference, "Science and Cents: Exploring
the Economics of Biotechnology," which focused on the
general economic aspects of biotechnology as well as regional
issues surrounding the biotech industry in Texas. This article
will discuss these regional issues.
Strong research and commercialization
are the two necessary elements for a region to become a major
biotech center. Some of the key ingredients for becoming a
renowned center of biotech research are having top-ranked
schools, star scientists and research funding. The strong
academic institutions and laboratories draw star scientists
to the region, who in turn provide the groundbreaking research.
However, research by itself is not enough
for a region to excel as a biotech center. The second important
element is the ability to commercialize the knowledge and
innovations developed by research institutions. Access to
capital is important for commercialization and depends on
the interplay between public, private, and venture capital
firms.
Where does Texas stand in the biotech
arena today compared with the rest of the country? In a recently
released study, the Brookings Institution classified regions
as major biotech centers if they had both strong track records
in research and commercialization. No metro areas in Texas
were on this list. This ranking was partly based on Ernst
& Young’s widely used definition of biotech which includes
pharmaceuticals and in life science R&D firms.
Nevertheless, using a broader definition
which also includes medical devices and testing laboratories,
Texas ranks sixth in the nation in terms of biotech employment
as shown in Figure 1. Texas has about 56,000 jobs in this
industry compared with almost 180,000 in California. There
aren’t many jobs in these industries in Texas primarily because
there is not much of a pharmaceutical presence in the state.
Recognizing the potential of the biotech
industry to be the next engine of growth for the region, Texas
is pursuing economic initiatives to foster growth in its biotech
sector, as are 40 other states.
What Determines the Location of the
Biotech Industry
Our conference title hit the nail
right on the head when it comes to the local determinants
of the biotech industry. For biotech to flourish in the state,
we need great science and a lot of cents. As discussed by
both Professors Zucker and Stone at the conference, the biotechnology
industry is largely dependent upon academia as a source of
new technology. Economic research shows that intellectual
capital flourishes around the great universities, which draw
both good scientists and students. However, the most important
factor seems to be the outstanding scientists in the area.
The existence of star scientists plays a role over and above
the presence of university and government research funding.
In science and engineering, most breakthroughs are made in
the top-rated doctoral programs, which generally house the
best scientists.
Star scientists are also integral to
the successful commercialization of scientific discoveries.
Star scientists who collaborate with outside firms provide
the intellectual human capital that defines a firm’s core
technology and largely determines a company’s success. The
location of top scientists also predicts where new technology
firms will locate.
Research by Professors Darby and Zucker
(two of our speakers) also shows that local venture capital
is very important to the industry’s growth. Venture capital
increases R&D productivity and fuels company expansion.
Research
Top-ranked schools
The quality of the educational
institutions and scientists in a state are critical for a
regional biotech presence. Figure 2 shows the top research
medical schools in the U.S., as ranked by U.S. News and
World Report in 2001. Texas has two universities in the
top 20 list, Baylor College of Medicine and University of
Texas Southwestern. Baylor is ranked 13th and UT Southwestern
17th in the nation.
| Figure 2 |
| Top Medical Schools—Research |
1 |
Harvard University
|
2 |
Johns Hopkins
University |
3 |
Washington University
in St. Louis |
4 |
University of
Pennsylvania |
5 |
Duke
University |
13 |
Baylor
College of Medicine |
17 |
University
of Texas Southwestern Medical Center—Dallas
|
|
Star Scientists
The growth and location of intellectual
human capital is very important for the development of the
regional biotech industry. According to Professors Darby and
Zucker, star scientists are important because, unlike other
sciences, innovations in biotech can give rise to excludable
knowledge; i.e., knowledge that does not disseminate quickly.
This may be because of the complexity or tacit nature (i.e.,
learning by doing) of the information necessary to apply the
innovation.
Moreover, even when the knowledge of
new techniques becomes disseminated, "...the knowledge is
far more productive when embodied in the scientist with the
genius and the vision to innovate, to define the research
frontier and apply the research techniques in the most promising
areas."[1] Firms working with star scientists are more likely
to be successful. According to Zucker et al. (1998), five
articles coauthored by academic stars and the firm’s scientists
imply five more products in development, 3.5 more products
on the market, and 860 more employees.
How does Texas rank with respect to
star scientists? One measure of star scientists is the number
of Nobel laureates at the state’s research institutions. Figure
3 shows the number of Nobel laureates in medicine and chemistry
since 1980 (chemistry is included because many of the chemistry
Nobelists were working in biotech-related fields). As can
be seen, Texas has a good number of star scientists: UT Southwestern
has four Nobel laureates (Alfred Gilman, Johann Deisenhofer,
Michael Brown and Joseph Goldstein), Rice University has two
(Richard Smalley, Robert Curl), and the UT Medical School
in Houston has one (Ferid Murad).
Funding
Another measure of biotech research
capacity and activity is research funding. The majority of
public funds for biomedical research flows through the National
Institutes of Health (NIH), whose budget in 2001 was $18.8
billion. The better universities and medical schools get the
lion’s share of funding.
| Figure 4 |
NIH Research Grant Recipients, 2001
(millions) |
1 |
Johns
Hopkins University |
$458
|
2
|
University
of Pennsylvania |
$376
|
3 |
University
of Washington |
$356
|
15 |
Baylor College
of Medicine |
$222 |
26 |
University of
Texas Southwestern Medical Center |
$145 |
39 |
M.D.
Anderson |
$102
|
50 |
University
of Texas Houston |
$
84 |
|
Figure 4 lists research funding in biology
granted by the NIH in 2001. Johns Hopkins University ranks
first in the nation with half a billion dollars in funding,
followed by the University of Pennsylvania and the University
of Washington. The Baylor College of Medicine in Houston leads
Texas with nearly 500 grants and $221 million dollars in research
dollars. Baylor is ranked 15th in the nation, UT Southwestern
26th, M.D. Anderson 39th, and UT Houston 50th.
Aggregating by state (see Figure 5),
Texas is sixth in the nation with nearly $900 million in grants,
while California receives nearly three times as much with
$2.5 billion in funding. Ranked by cities, Houston is eighth
after Boston, New York, San Diego, Philadelphia, Baltimore,
Seattle and Los Angeles.
An encouraging sign is that NIH funding
to Texas has grown relatively faster in the 1990s than in
any other state. NIH funding to Texas nearly doubled since
1992, and, as can be seen in Figure 6, it has really taken
off since 1998.
Patents and Licenses
A fourth gauge of biotech capacity
and research activity is the number of patents granted. Growth
in the life science industry is tied to the rate of intellectual
property generation and commercialization. The Texas Health
and Bioscience Institute (THBI) reports that life science
patents issued to Texas residents increased 54 percent from
1997 to 1999, reaching a record 577 in 1999. Figure 7 shows
that the University of Texas system is fifth in the nation
in terms of patents issued and Baylor College of Medicine
ranks 25th.
| Figure 7 |
| Biotech Patents Granted to Universities |
|
|
Rank |
Patents |
| University
of California System |
1
|
460
|
| Massachusetts
Institute of Technology |
2 |
121
|
| Stanford
University |
3
|
111
|
| California
Institute of Technology |
4
|
107
|
| University
of Texas System |
5
|
101
|
| Baylor
College of Medicine |
25
|
31
|
|
Texas researchers are beginning to bring
biotechnology-related ideas to market. According to THBI,
income from Texas intellectual property increased from $4.2
million to $25.6 million between 1993 and 1999. Although still
small in magnitude, the latest figure represents more than
a 500 percent increase. Figure 8 shows license income from
biotech products generated at universities in 2000. The universities
which are top-ranked have had licensing blockbusters or "big
hits." For example, almost all of the $57 million that
Florida State University receives comes from a patent on a
method to produce a tumor-fighting chemical which Bristol-Myers
Squibb now markets as Taxol, a breast cancer drug.
| Figure 8 |
| Tech Transfer Riches (millions) |
|
|
Rank |
License
Income |
| Columbia
University |
1
|
$89
|
| University
of California System |
2
|
$74
|
| Florida
State |
3 |
$57
|
| Baylor
College of Medicine |
13 |
$12
|
| Texas A&M
|
24
|
$
5 |
| UT
Southwestern |
25 |
$4.9
|
|
Commercialization
Public Companies
Texas’ research base in the biological
sciences is very respectable and is growing rapidly. However,
the story is not quite the same on the commercialization side.
As shown in Figure 9, publicly traded pharmaceutical and biotech
firms are concentrated in New York, Boston and San Francisco.
Seven of the 10 largest pharmaceutical companies in the nation
are in New York. Large biotech companies (with more than 100
employees) are concentrated in San Francisco (16 percent),
New York (13 percent), and Boston (12 percent).
As shown in Figure 10 the distribution
of top-rated medical and biological sciences schools is similar.
Large concentrations of biotech firms are where the top-rated
schools are located.
There is a symbiotic relationship between
universities, startup firms, and large pharmaceutical companies.
The industrial structure of the biotech industry is such that
small startup companies exist side by side with large established
pharmaceutical firms, often in proximity to universities.
The academic research done in universities spawns small startup
companies, but these R&D firms, though innovation rich,
are poor in capital and resources necessary to commercialize
their products. For this reason, startups need the distribution
and production processes of larger firms to take their products
to market. Conversely, established firms find it difficult
to keep abreast of all the technological advances in the industry.
By purchasing some of a startup’s equity, they gain access
to R&D and have shareholder influence to better monitor
the R&D firm, thereby reducing some of the uncertainty
of the investment.
Private Firms
Figure 11 illustrates the number
of private biotech firms across states. These firms can be
as small as a one-person firm. California has a total of 8,100
firms and Texas has about 4,500 firms. The numbers are very
recent and show that even though Texas does not have large
pharmaceutical or biotech firms, it has many small firms,
indicative of the rapid growth of biotech activity in Texas.
Texas universities fare well with respect
to patents. However, most patents are owned by firms and the
distribution of patents is very similar to the distribution
of pharmaceutical and biotech firms across the country. As
can be seen in Figure 12, scientists in New York received
6,800 patents between 1990 and 1999, ranking first in the
nation, while. San Francisco was second with 3,900 patents.
In Texas, the number of patents received between 1990 and
1999 was 1,350, with 634 in Houston and 434 in Dallas.
| Figure 12 |
| All Biotech Patents 1990–99 |
New
York |
6,800 |
San
Francisco |
3,991 |
Philadelphia |
3,214 |
Boston |
3,007 |
Houston |
634 |
Dallas |
434 |
San
Antonio |
172 |
Austin |
110 |
|
Venture Capital
Figure 13 illustrates Texas’ share
of venture capital (VC) funding. The blue line depicts Texas’
share in total venture capital investment and the orange line
Texas’ share in biotech venture capital investment. Although
Texas’ share of total VC investment has been going up, the
state has not been keeping up in the biotech arena.
Between 1995 and 2001, Boston had 10
highly active venture capital firms and San Francisco had
21. In contrast, no city in Texas had an active venture capital
firm specializing in biotech. Economic research in this area
strongly suggests that venture capital investment, especially
local VC investment, is important for the development of a
region’s biotech industry. So, Texas still has a long way
to go.
Although the amount of venture capital
available to industry declined drastically in 2001 and 2002,
Figure 14 shows that the biotech industry was the third largest
recipient of venture capital funds in the first quarter of
2002. Of the $752 million invested in this industry, however,
Texas received only $14 million in funds, with the money going
to three Houston firms: ADVISYS, Inc. ($10 million), Medical
Metrics, Inc. ($2.3 million), and MithraGen, Inc. ($1.3 million).
Texas Biotech Initiatives
Statewide interest in biotech is
very high and cooperation among public and private stakeholders
is growing, as is state funding. The state government has
committed vast resources to the Texas biotechnology cause.
Governor Perry established a Council
on Science and Biotechnology Development after he took office
to assess the strengths and weaknesses of the state and to
propose a road map for fostering biotech in the state. The
Council is made up of presidents and CEOs of the major medical
schools, hospitals and biotech firms in the state, plus one
or two Nobel laureates. The Council will soon publicize its
findings.
Also, in 2001, Governor Perry asked
for, and the legislature approved, $800 million for science
and engineering research, and commercialization activities.
This includes funding for the following:
- $385 million for construction, laboratory
expansion and equipment acquisition for science and engineering
in the state’s universities
- $25 million for a Product Development
Fund, giving preference to biotech
- $20 million for a Small Business
Incubator Fund, giving preference to biotech
- $20 million to establish the Southeast
Texas Biotech Park in Houston
- Creation of a new San Antonio Life
Sciences Institute in the UT System
- Creation of the Texas Tech Diabetes
Research Center at the El Paso campus
Various research parks that include
facilities for life science companies also stand to benefit
from the legislature’s commitment to industry. These include
BioHouston, the Woodlands Research Forest, the Texas Research
Park in San Antonio, and the Harrington Regional Medical Center
in Amarillo.
In addition to state programs, there
are also many regional and local initiatives in all major
cities in Texas. Many are business accelerators that assist
emerging companies and entrepreneurs with business plans,
management expertise, and acquiring venture capital. Most
are working closely with universities and their startups.
These include:
- Austin Technology Incubator was launched
in 1989, and is a division of the IC2 Institute. It has
spawned about 60 companies in the high-tech arena and five
of these companies have gone public.
- STARTech Early Ventures is a high-tech
business accelerator in Dallas with a recently established
medical division. STARTech has spawned three firms. Eliance,
one of the firms, was just bought by Macrogenics in June
2002.
- Houston Technology Center is a business
accelerator for Houston-based emerging technology industries.
The Center has spawned five biotech-related companies.
- Southwest Bio-Link Center links seven
regional centers across the country to promote biotech education,
particularly technician education. The national center is
in San Diego and the Southwest region center is located
at Austin Community College.
- Center for Nanoscience and Technology
is working on an interface between nanosciences and bioengineering
at Rice University. It is one of six major Nanoscale Science
and Engineering Centers funded by the National Science Foundation,
and the first to focus on applications of nanoscience to
biology and the environment. Their $10.5 million grant will
enable educational and industrial outreach activities in
addition to research. Other grant recipients include Columbia,
Cornell, Harvard, Northwestern and Rensselaer Polytechnic.
- San Antonio Initiative is designed
to bring public and private sectors together to foster the
development of biotech and life science companies.
- The Panhandle Initiative is based
at The Harrington Regional Medical Center in Amarillo. The
Center works with many agencies and facilities across Texas
such as Texas Tech, Texas A&M, West Texas A&M and
the U.S. Veterans Hospital to carry out research in agritech,
biotech, environmental biology and pharmacology.
Conclusion
Does Texas have what it takes to
develop a major biotech presence? On the plus side, Texas
has a good research base, with competitive institutions that
are benefiting from rapid research funding. The state has
several top-ranked institutions, and a good number of star
scientists and the state’s universities rank highly in terms
of patents and research funding.
On the other hand, Texas lags in the
commercialization of innovative ideas coming out of the universities
and research centers. Texas lacks the venture capital and
the large, established pharmaceutical firms which will extend
research contracts and equity funding to fledgling biotech
companies.
If Texas is to become a major biotech
center, it needs to leverage its scientific base and transform
itself from a center of innovation to also become a center
of commercialization. While there is no guarantee that stimulating
the necessary local venture capital and entrepreneurship will
assure Texas a prominent place on the biotech map, without
commercialization, Texas cannot become a major player.
—John V. Duca and Mine K. Yücel
| Note
- Zucker, Lynne, Michael Darby and Jeff Armstrong
(1998). "Geographically Localized Knowledge:
Spillovers or Markets?" Economic Inquiry,
Vol XXXVI, pp. 65–86.
About In Depth
This article is based on
a presentation by John V. Duca, vice president
and senior economist and Mine K. Yücel, assistant
vice president and senior economist, Research
Department, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
The views expressed are
those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect
the positions of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
or the Federal Reserve System. |
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