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Issue 2, March/April 2002
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
The Economic Impact of Biotechnology
It's as daunting a task today to divine
how biotechnology will affect future economic activity as
it might have been for economists in the 18th, 19th and 20th
centuries to forecast how the steam engine, electricity and
the microchip would influence and eventually transform the
world economy. With the assistance of mind-boggling inventions,
humankind's bucolic existence has morphed into a world that
our agrarian ancestors would scarcely recognize. Biotechnology
may change our world as much.[1]
Even though the bioscience industry
has been around for 25 years and the gargantuan task of mapping
the human genome is complete, it's still not clear to what
extent life science technology will affect our economy. Some
observers have already labeled this the "Biological Century,"
betting that advances in the life sciences will yield changes
more momentous than those of electricity and computers. Such
predictions may be overinflated, but biotechnology has the
potential to greatly affect the economy.
Two types of economic effects are already
appearing in the nascent industry. By analogy, they resemble
the direct splash of a stone tossed into a still pond and
the indirect rippling that follows. Direct impacts from biotechnology
include such obvious pluses as research and development (R&D)
spending, sophisticated jobs and tax revenues. Biotech companies
have already sprouted up in many parts of the country (Chart
1). Less visible are the indirect effects, which include
improvements in quality of life and living standards stemming
from faster labor productivity growth, better health products
and services, and a cleaner environment.

Landmark discoveries and novel inventions
have marked biotechnology's early history. These advances,
propelled by public funding and market incentives, have increased
interest and sustained research activity. The current marketplace
is characterized by intense competition but also by cooperation
among public and private stakeholders. However the industry
and supporting science play out, the advent of biotechnology
could profoundly affect our lives.
What Transforms Market Economies?
Historically, the combination
of groundbreaking discoveries and subsequent commercialization
has preceded periods of prolonged economic expansion. For
example, the Industrial Revolution in Great Britain was launched
by a confluence of new technologies with commercial potential,
such as the steam engine. Later, the internal combustion engine
and electric power revolutionized America. More recently,
William Shockley's transistor and Jack Kilby's microchip laid
the foundation for the Information Age. All these eras of
discovery and applied research were followed by strong economic
growth.
Benchmark discoveries and innovations
such as steam power, electricity and the microchip always
garner the most attention. But it's usually not until the
technology is harnessed and products are mass produced that
we see economic consequences.
Similarly for biotechnology, completion
of the human genome map—while transcendent in scientific
importance—will remain of little use commercially until
the information can be used to combat human disease. Scientists
are making significant headway, but as recently as 2001, one
report said the genome sequencing has not yet "materially
affect[ed] the speed of development of any given product."[2]
All this is not to understate the gains in biotechnology in
recent years but to point out that it will take time before
products are conceived and economies materially affected.
The Splash (Direct Impact)
Karl Ereky, a Hungarian
engineer, first coined the word biotechnology in 1919. At
the time, the term referred to all lines of work involved
in creating products from raw materials with the aid of living
organisms. Today, the Biotechnology Industry Organization
(BIO) defines biotechnology as "the use of cellular and
molecular processes to solve problems or make products."
In May 2000, BIO commissioned Ernst
& Young to determine the aggregate impact firms involved
in biotechnology have on the U.S. economy. The study looked
at information from firms whose primary business operations
fell under five Standard Industrial Classification codes.
While some components of biotech activity are not included
in this definition, the report gives an idea of the direct
impact bioscience is having on the economy.[3]
The study reveals impressive growth
for the industry. The life science industry more than doubled
revenue from $8 billion in 1993 to $20.2 billion in 1999.
R&D spending was $11 billion in 1999, not counting monies
spent by colleges, universities and nonprofits. Total tax
collections reached nearly $10 billion. Federal taxes accounted
for $6.8 billion of the total and state and local taxes for
the remainder.
Completion of the human genome and promises
of new medicines sent biotech share prices skyward in 1999
and 2000. Since then, sparse profits and the realization that
investment returns to biotechnology are going to take some
time have kept overall stock prices subdued (Chart 2).
Profitability in the four largest biotech firms has instilled
recent confidence in the sector, but the majority of firms
have yet to show a profit.
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Biotech activity should
continue to expand. Overall health care and prescription drug
expenditures have increased steadily in recent years. For
example, health care expenditures as a percentage of GDP have
grown from 8.8 percent in 1980 to 13 percent in 2000. Prescription
drug expenditures have been climbing steadily since 1994 (Chart
3). The aging of baby boomers will only augment such
trends. Recognizing the growth potential in the industry,
41 states, including Texas, New Mexico and Louisiana, are
currently pursuing economic initiatives to foster growth in
their emerging biotechnology sectors. (See the box titled
"BioTexas.")
The Ripples (Indirect Impact)
Still a relative newcomer
to the economy, biotechnology is already having a positive
indirect influence on economic activity. Ernst & Young
estimates that biotechnology has an employment multiplier
of 2.9. In other words, each job created in biotech generates
an additional 2.9 jobs, resulting from biotech firms' purchases
and consumer spending of biotech employees. With the multiplier
effect, biotech's total impact on employment comes in at more
than 437,000 jobs.
Ernst & Young gives biotech a 2.3
revenue multiplier, increasing the total impact on revenues
from biotechnology to $46.5 billion. The personal income multiplier
is estimated to be 2, which results in a $28.8 billion total
impact on personal income from the industry.
Biotechnology's contributions to medicine
and health care are growing rapidly, promising to increase
human longevity and healthiness. To the extent that biotechnology
results in new treatments for old ailments, people will become
more productive over their lifetimes.
In addition, improved strains in agricultural
crops have helped increase yields for many years. Research
and development of more-productive and disease-resistant crops
have enabled output per farmer to increase steadily. Improvements
in quality of life will continue as scientists further harness
biological processes to clean up hazardous waste and contaminated
areas. Environmental remediation is growing fast as a result
of increased public demand for a cleaner, safer and more natural
living space.
Structure of the Bioscience Industry:
Form Follows Function
The structure of the bioscience
industry is in flux. Advances in biotech science have led
to an evolution of the industrial structure: from the domination
of large-scale firms to the entry of many small, innovative
start-ups to alliances between the large and small for a more
efficient way of doing business.
Stanley Cohen and Herbert Boyer's transfer
of DNA from one organism to another in 1973 was a major milestone
in biotech, leading to an explosion of new research and production
mechanisms and a change in the industry's organization. This
advance in genetic science propelled the industry along two
different paths, according to Henderson, Orsenigo and Pisano
(1999).
One path employed genetic science as
a process technology, that is, using the methods of Cohen
and Boyer to mass produce proteins as therapeutic agents.
Genetic engineering required competency in the new techniques
and a different type of R&D effort by firms. Before genetic
engineering, a small number of proteins could be manufactured
either from natural sources or by organic chemical methods.
Genetic engineering made it possible to produce large quantities
of proteins, opening a completely new area for drug research.
Henderson, Orsenigo and Pisano argue that this process technology
was the force behind the first large-scale entry into the
biotech industry since the early post-World War II period.
Zucker, Darby and Brewer (1998) also note that the number
of firms using biotechnology "grew from nonexistent to
over 700 in less than two decades, transforming the nature
of the pharmaceutical industry."
The second path employed biotechnology
techniques as a research tool for discovering and manufacturing
conventional, "small molecule" drugs.[4] This trend
reinforced the dominance of the large pharmaceutical firms,
which were able to leverage their competency in chemical R&D
processes to build off the knowledge already codified in the
academic literature.
The academic research done in universities
in the 1970s and 1980s spawned many small, innovation-rich
start-up companies, beginning with Genentech, formed by Boyer
and Robert Swanson in 1976. The 1990s brought much merger
activity as large biotech companies purchased innovative start-ups.[5]
Often, the mergers occurred because the target R&D firms,
while rich in talent, were poor in capital and resources to
commercialize products. These start-ups needed the distribution
and production processes of larger firms to take their products
to market. Conversely, larger firms needed new ideas but often
found it more economical to acquire brain-rich start-ups than
to expend scarce resources for cutting-edge in-house research.
Moreover, by buying an established firm, a larger firm was
able to mitigate the uncertainty inherent in R&D efforts.
Public and Private Collaboration
Much basic biotech research has
been publicly funded and conducted at universities because
the research is a public good and has positive spillovers.
(See the box titled "Biotech: A Public Good?") The
National Institutes of Health (NIH) funds the majority of
biotech research in the United States. The NIH budget in 2001
was $20.5 billion, or roughly twice the size of private spending
on biotech R&D in 1999 (the most current year for which
we have data). About 82 percent of the NIH budget is for grants
and contracts that support research and training in universities.
Another 10 percent goes toward in-house research. Henderson,
Orsenigo and Pisano report that NIH spending on basic research
has had a significant effect on the productivity of the large
firms that received funds.
Studies suggest that the public-good
aspects of biotech research make it costly to work through
the market and that mergers and acquisitions are one way of
internalizing these costs. Gaisford et al. (2001) posit that
restructuring activity can be motivated by institutional failure
or weak patent protection and incomplete contracts. Disputes
between biotech companies over the control of patent and contractual
rights to key technologies have landed many of them in court.
Vertical integration solves some of these contractual problems
and helps firms protect the returns on their innovations.
Mergers and acquisitions also allow
companies to take better advantage of their relative strengths.
Life science firms generally have different comparative advantages
in producing knowledge, whether it be codified (designs, formulas,
patents), tacit (learning-by-doing) or distributed (only valuable
if used in conjunction with others). Because transferring
knowledge between independent firms through the market is
difficult, firms vertically integrate to make such transfers
more efficient.[6]
In addition to corporate restructuring
has been the rise of strategic alliances among firms. Such
partnering allows two or more firms to combine forces without
bearing the cost of merging or coordinating a joint venture.
Alliances have been important for biotech innovation because
established firms find it difficult to keep abreast of all
the industry's technological advances, according to Filson
and Morales (2001). Their study shows that firms in a strategic
alliance purchase some of their R&D partner's equity,
thus gaining shareholder influence to better monitor the R&D
firm and to allay some of the investment's uncertainty. Some
recent examples are collaborations between Nanogen and Hitachi;
Affymetrix and Perlegen; OSI Pharmaceuticals, Genentech and
Roche; Bayer and CuraGen; and Abbott Laboratories and Millennium
Pharmaceuticals.[7]
Zucker, Darby and Armstrong (2001) show
that basic university science is integral to the successful
commercialization of scientific discoveries. Star scientists
provide the intellectual capital that defines the firm's core
technology and largely determines the company's success. The
researchers also show that collaboration between academic
and corporate scientists has a significant effect on a wide
range of firm performance measures. For example, for an average
firm, Zucker, Darby and Armstrong (1998) find that five articles
coauthored by academic stars and the firm's scientists imply
about five more products in development, 3.5 products on the
market and 860 more employees.
According to Zucker, Darby and Brewer
(1998), the location of top scientists also predicts where
new technology firms will locate. The bioscience industry's
growth and location from 1975 to 1990 was dependent on the
growth and location of intellectual capital. Intellectual
capital flourished around the great universities (the authors
cite 20), but the existence of outstanding scientists played
a role over and above the presence of universities and government
research funding. Local venture capital also was important
to the industry's growth.
The evolution of the bioscience industry
provides insights into how states, all now vying for a piece
of the biotech pie, can focus their efforts. The recipe for
success seems to start with strong academic institutions and
laboratories with a good research base. These institutions
will provide the groundbreaking research and draw top scientists
to the region. Another ingredient is an institutional structure
that will aid technology transfer or commercialization of
innovations arising from the research and that will foster
start-up companies. In the long run, firms will go where the
research and start-ups are percolating.
Conclusion
Life science as a formal
industry has only been around for a quarter century, but using
living organisms to advance human life quality has transpired
for thousands of years. Public funding has expedited growth
in the life sciences and catalyzed private interest in the
sector. Like the gains from trade among countries, trading
among private and public entities has been key to industry
growth in recent years. In particular, universities, labs
and incubators laden with ideas and brainpower have collaborated
with industry leaders whose deep pockets have enabled them
to produce, market and sell new life science products. While
it is too early to tell what the overall impact of biotech
will be, the industry's effect on the economy is already noticeable
and growing fast.
—John Thompson, Mine K. Yücel
and John V. Duca
Bio Texas
The Texas life
science industry is still in a fledgling stage.
In recent years, the industry has garnered considerable
interest among investors, politicians, consultants
and community developers but remained relatively
small. The Texas Healthcare and Bioscience Institute
(THBI) reported that the Texas life science industry
employed 50,650 people in 1999, only 0.5 percent
of statewide employment. Life science jobs in
the state have continued to grow, however, increasing
at an annualized rate of 1.4 percent between 1997
and 1999.[1]
Dallas, Houston,
Austin and San Antonio are the life science strongholds,
making up two-thirds of the total industry employment.
Even though it is small, the industry is already
having a positive effect on local economies. Compensation
for those working in the industry is relatively
high; life science employees earn an average of
$48,623, considerably higher than the state average
of $34,936.
Growth in the
life science industry is unequivocally tied to
the rate of intellectual property generation and
commercialization. Life science intellectual property
in Texas is growing quickly but still lags the
powerhouses of California, New York, Massachusetts,
New Jersey and Pennsylvania. THBI reports that
life science patents issued to Texas residents
increased 54 percent from 1997 to 1999, reaching
a record 577 in 1999. Novel intellectual property
will continue to increase as individuals are trained
in the life sciences. State institutions of higher
learning awarded 17,894 life science degrees in
1997.
Grants, endowments
and investments enable researchers to discover
new life science technologies and bring them to
market. Texas ranked third nationwide in 1999
in university dollars earmarked for life science
research and development. In all, just over $1
billion was spent, an 18.1 percent increase over
1995. Most of the funding went to Baylor College
of Medicine, Texas A&M University and University
of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas.[2]
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, it represents more than a 500 percent
increase. Such returns reinforce the incentive
to produce biotech research that can be commercialized.
The state government
is committing vast resources to the Texas biotechnology
cause. The 2001 Legislature appropriated $800
million for science, engineering, research and
commercialization activities. Various research
parks that include facilities for life science
companies will benefit from the Legislature's
commitment. These facilities include BioHouston,
the Texas Research Park in San Antonio, the Woodlands
Research Forest and the Harrington Regional Medical
Center in Amarillo.
Within the
biotech sector and across all industries, the
pace of venture capital investment in Texas is
dominated by national fluctuations related to
changing conditions in U.S. financial markets.
Last year, venture capital investment in Texas
fell sharply, in line with the national decline
(Chart B1), much of which paralleled
the fall in the Nasdaq stock index.[3]

Abstracting
from these general movements, Texas' share of
U.S. biotech venture investment has varied within
a low range of 2 to 3 percent in recent years,
even though Texas' share of overall venture capital
investment has risen to about 7 percent, roughly
the state's share of the U.S. population. This
disparity, depicted in Chart B2, reflects that
venture capital investment in other high-tech
industries and in non-health care services in
Texas has outstripped growth elsewhere in the
United States, while Texas' venture investments
in health care and biotech have lagged the national
pace.[4]

These differences
likely stem from factors affecting the state's
regional comparative advantage across industries.
Nevertheless, like the vast majority of states,
Texas' shares of U.S. venture capital investment
across industries is also held down by the disproportionately
high concentration of venture investment in California
(44 percent of the U.S. total in 2001:4) and,
to a lesser extent, in New England and New York.
Texas life
science firms could flourish if three key challenges
are surmounted. First, strong local scientific
and academic norms must permit the rapid translation
of academic results into competitive enterprises.
Second, researchers and stakeholders need good
access to capital. And third, favorable royalty
schemes between the researcher and universities
must protect incentive structures for scientists
wishing to take their intelligence to market.
| Notes
- THBI 2001 Index, Texas
Healthcare and Bioscience Institute,
2001.
- State Government Initiatives
in Biotechnology 2001, September
2001. Report prepared for the Biotechnology
Industry Organization by the Technology
Partnership Practice, Battelle Memorial
Institute and State Science and
Technology Institute.
- For details on venture capital,
see, "The Venture Capital Revolution,"
by Paul Gompers and Josh Lerner,
in The Journal of Economic Perspectives,
vol. 15, Spring 2001, pp. 145–68,
and "How Does the Stock Market Affect
the Economy?" by John V. Duca, in
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Southwest
Economy, September/October
2001.
- The charts use data from the PriceWaterhouseCoopers
Money Tree/Venture One survey through
2001:3. This survey, which was revamped
in 2001:4, is now called the PriceWaterhouseCoopers/Venture
Economics/ National Venture Capital
Association MoneyTree Survey.
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Biotech: A Public
Good?
Public funding through government
agencies and universities has been a major factor
in the history of biotech research. Such funding
is an efficient way to advance biotech research,
which, like all basic research, has certain public-good
characteristics and positive spillover effects.
Public goods are those in
which consumption is nonrival and nonexcludable
or where exclusion is very costly. For example,
the outcome of a biotech experiment can be considered
a public good. When the experiment's outcome is
published, it becomes hard to exclude people from
seeing the results (nonexcludability). And, an
individual knowing the results (consuming the
good) does not compete with another's ability
to consume (nonrival in consumption). In fact,
the additional cost of another person knowing
the results is nil.[1]
The nonexcludability
characteristic also gives rise to what is called
a free-rider problem. Consumers of the good have
no incentive to pay when they know they can get
the good for free. Because of the nonexcludable
nature of biotech "goods," firms have
no economic motivation to advance the research.
For this reason, most public goods (such as basic
research, national defense and so forth) are paid
through taxes.
Moreover, if
a good has positive spillover effects, benefits
accrue to people other than those paying for the
good. Private production of the good then would
be less than optimal because it would not take
account of the spillover benefits accruing to
consumers who did not specifically buy and pay
for the good.
Possibly recognizing
the public-good qualities of basic biotech research,
the Morrill Acts of 1862 and 1890 were passed
in response to the growing demand for agricultural
and technical education. The beneficiaries of
the Morrill Acts were institutions designated
as land-grant universities, the first publicly
supported venues for biotech research. The acts
provided these institutions with federal land
grants and monies. A key component of the system
was the Agricultural Experiment Stations, which
promoted agricultural research.
The majority
of public funds for biomedical research now flows
through the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
NIH first emerged in 1887 as the Laboratory of
Hygiene in Stapleton, N.Y. This one-room lab was
initially set up to find cures for infectious
diseases such as cholera, typhoid fever and smallpox.
In 1930 the lab was expanded, reorganized and
renamed the National Institute of Health. In 1948,
the lab widened its scope, and four institutes
were created to support research on cardiovascular
disease, mental illness, infectious diseases,
and experimental biology and medicine. These days,
the goal of NIH is to acquire new knowledge to
help prevent, detect, diagnose and treat diseases
and disability.
Because there
is quite a bit of learning by doing in biotech
research, Zucker, Darby and Armstrong (2001) argue,
some biotech innovations are excludable. The excludability
arises from the complexity or tacitness of the
information necessary to practice the innovation.
This information is held by a small number of
star scientists and hence does not disseminate
as quickly. However, the authors do suggest that
publicly funded research greatly benefits the
biotech industry. Public funding of biotech research
can be justified insofar as it continues to display
public-good qualities.
| Notes
- This is in contrast to a private
good, such as food, where one person's
consumption leaves less for others
and it is relatively cheap to prevent
others from consuming it.
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| Biotechnology Timeline |
| 4000-2000
B.C. |
Yeast
used to leaven bread and ferment beer (Egypt). Production
of cheese and fermentation of wine (Sumeria, China
and Egypt). |
| 500 B.C. |
First
antibiotic—moldy soybean curds used to treat
boils (China). |
| A.D. 100 |
First
insecticide—powdered chrysanthemums (China). |
| 1322 |
An
Arab chieftain first uses artificial insemination
to produce superior horses. |
| 1663 |
Robert
Hooke discovers existence of the cell. |
| 1675 |
Antony
van Leeuwenhoek discovers bacteria. |
| 1857 |
Louis
Pasteur proposes that microbes cause fermentation. |
| 1865 |
Science
of genetics begins: Gregor Mendel studies peas and
discovers that genetic traits are passed from parents
to offspring in a predictable way. |
| 1902 |
The
term "immunology" first appears. |
| 1906 |
The
term "genetics" is introduced. |
| 1919 |
First
use of the word "biotechnology" in print. |
| 1928 |
Alexander
Fleming discovers penicillin as an antibiotic. |
| 1933 |
Hybrid
corn is commercialized. By 1945, hybrid corn, with
its remarkable yields, accounts for 78 percent of
U.S.-grown corn. |
| 1944 |
Oswald
T. Avery and his colleagues at the Rockefeller Institute
in New York discover that deoxyribonucleic acid
(DNA) is the substance that carries the genetic
information. |
| 1953 |
In
Cambridge, 24-year-old scholarship holder James
Watson and 36-year-old physicist Francis Crick describe
the double-helix structure of DNA. |
| 1955 |
Frederick
Sanger decodes the amino acid sequence of insulin
and thus shows for the first time that proteins
consist of a defined sequence of amino acids. |
| 1966 |
The
genetic code is cracked, demonstrating that a sequence
of three nucleotide bases determines each of 20
amino acids. |
| 1973 |
Herbert
Boyer and Stanley Cohen succeed in recombining DNA
for the first time. This experiment is regarded
as the birth of genetic engineering. |
| 1976 |
Genentech,
the first biotechnology company, is founded by Robert
Swanson and Herbert Boyer. |
| 1990 |
The
Human Genome Project—an international effort
to map all the genes in the human body—is
launched. |
| 2001 |
Scientific
journals publish the complete human genome sequence. |
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| About the Authors
Thompson is an associate
economist, Yücel is an assistant vice president
and Duca is a vice president and senior economist
in the Research Department of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas.
Notes
- The terms life science technology and biotechnology
are used interchangeably in this article.
- See Ernst & Young (2001), p. 5.
- Standard Industrial Classification codes included
in the definition are 2833, 2834, 2835, 2836
and 8731. See Ernst & Young (2000).
- See Henderson, Orsenigo and Pisano (1999),
p. 283.
- For example, Monsanto bought Calgene
and Agracetus, Dow Chemical acquired Mycogen
and Dupont bought Pioneer Hi-Bred. More recently,
about 12 acquisitions took place from 2000 to
mid-2001.
- See Gaisford et al. (2001), p. 178.
- See Ernst & Young (2001), p. 58.
References
Ernst & Young (2000),
The Economic Contributions of the Biotechnology
Industry to the U.S. Economy, report prepared
for the Biotechnology Industry Organization, May.
——— (2001),
Focus on Fundamentals: The Biotechnology Report,
15th Annual Review, October.
Filson, Darren, and Rosa
Morales (2001), "Equity Links and Information
Acquisition in Biotechnology Alliances,"
Economics Working Paper no. 2001:24, Claremont
Colleges (Claremont, Calif., August).
Gaisford, James D., Jill
E. Hobbs, William A. Kerr, Nicholas Perdikis and
Marni D. Plunkett (2001), The Economics of
Biotechnology (Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar).
Henderson, Rebecca, Luigi
Orsenigo and Gary Pisano (1999), "The Pharmaceutical
Industry and the Revolution in Molecular Biology:
Interactions among Scientific, Institutional and
Organizational Change," in Sources of
Industrial Leadership, ed. David C. Mowery
and Richard R. Nelson (New York: Cambridge University
Press), 267–311.
About Southwest Economy
Southwest Economy
is published six times annually by the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas. The views expressed are
those of the authors and should not be attributed
to the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas or the Federal
Reserve System.
Articles may be reprinted
on the condition that the source is credited and
a copy is provided to the Research Department
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Southwest Economy
is available free of charge by writing the Public
Affairs Department, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas,
P.O. Box 655906, Dallas, TX 75265-5906, or by
telephoning (214) 922-5254. |
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