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Abstract
Over the last 150 years, agriculture has been subject to several waves of
innovation which have significantly altered its institutional structures, its products
and the way it is practised. Mechanical, biological and chemical innovations
have, in turn, reduced labour requirements, increased yields and reduced the
impact of agricultural pests. More recently, computer and remote sensing
technologies have improved input precision. Agricultural biotechnology is now
emerging as a wellspring of innovations that will reshape agriculture as profoundly
as any previous innovation paradigm.' This new technology has unique
features which economists need to understand in order to formulate appropriate
policy advice.
This paper has two main purposes. First, we provide an overview of agricultural
biotechnology. There are lessons from medical biotechnology which can
be applied to agriculture. In addition, there are new institutions, including
technology transfer offices and arrangements for intellectual property rights,
which will be introduced and discussed. The second purpose is to introduce
some basic analytical considerations and methodological issues which will be
important in the study of biotechnology. In particular, these methodologies
will relate to the issues in industrial organization associated with the process of
product research, development and introduction; issues associated with adoption
of biotechnology; and issues associated with pricing. Thus far, commercial
biotechnology has been concentrated in the United States, but this technology
has important global implications. This paper will examine and project what
the American experience implies for the rest of the world and show how
biotechnology and its evolution fit within the context of the relationship between
developed and developing nations.