Social Welfare Impact of Parallel Imports of Pharmaceuticals vis a vis Access to Medicine

Authors

  • Vandana Singh University School of Law and Legal Studies, GGSIP University, New Delhi – 110 078, India
  • Research Scholar University School of Law and Legal Studies, GGSIP University, New Delhi – 110 078, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.56042/jipr.v31i4.17602

Keywords:

Parallel Imports, Exhaustion of Rights, TRIPS Agreement, Access to Medicines, Pharmaceutical Patents, Social Welfare

Abstract

Legitimate parallel imports stem from the doctrine of exhaustion or the ―first sale‖ doctrine in intellectual property law, particularly in cases of international and regional exhaustion. It is the law of the importing country that determines the legitimacy of any particular instance of parallel imports, namely the kind of exhaustion that such country recognises and follows—national, international or regional. Since parallel importation involves taking advantage of price arbitrage by bypassing the official distribution network of the intellectual property holder, it is commonly referred to as the ―grey market‖ and remains a controversial area in law. Under the flexibility provided by Article 6 of the TRIPS Agreement, a country may adopt different approaches to exhaustion for different forms of intellectual property, such as patents and trademarks. This complicates the legal position when the subject matter of parallel imports is protected by multiple intellectual property rights, enabling right holders to use these overlaps to restrict such imports. In the pharmaceutical sector, the additional requirement of marketing and import approvals further makes the import process more complex. In a global context marked by instances of excessive pricing of medicines, the legitimisation of parallel imports through the explicit adoption of international exhaustion has emerged as a potential mechanism to improve access to affordable medicines, particularly in developing and least developed countries. Based on doctrinal and comparative legal research involving the analysis of international agreements, national laws, judicial decisions and existing literature, this paper examines the social welfare impact of parallel imports in terms of their effect on drug prices and domestic pharmaceutical markets. The analysis suggests that while parallel imports can contribute to enhanced price competition and improved access to medicines in certain regulatory and market conditions, their overall welfare impact remains context-specific and empirically under-examined. The paper therefore concludes that parallel imports constitute an important policy tool for addressing access to medicines, but their effectiveness depends on appropriate regulatory frameworks and further systematic research.

 

Author Biography

  • Research Scholar, University School of Law and Legal Studies, GGSIP University, New Delhi – 110 078, India

    Research Scholar, USLLS, GGSIP University

Downloads

Published

2026-07-03

How to Cite

Social Welfare Impact of Parallel Imports of Pharmaceuticals vis a vis Access to Medicine. (2026). Journal of Intellectual Property Rights (JIPR), 31(4), 506-517. https://doi.org/10.56042/jipr.v31i4.17602

Similar Articles

31-40 of 210

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.