Explain, in light of their theories, what Locke, Smith, Ricardo, and Marx would probably say about the events in this case.
Explain, in light of their theories, what Locke, Smith, Ricardo, and Marx would probably say about the events in this case.
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Business
Ethics
Attempt All the case
Case – 1 Glaxo SmitbKine, Bristol – Myers Squibb, and AIDS in Africa
In 2004, the
United Nations estimated that the previous year 5 million more people around
the world had contracted the AIDS virus, 3 million had died, and a total of 40
million people were living with the infection. Seventy percent, or about 28
million of these, lived in sub – Saharan Africa, where the epidemic was at its
worst. Sub – Saharan Africa consists of the 48 countries and 643 million people
who reside south of the Saharan desert. In 16 of these countries, 10 percent
are infected with the virus, in 6 other nation, 20 percent are infected. The UN
predicted that in these 6 nations two – thirds of all 15 – year olds would
eventually die of AIDS and in those where 10 percent were infected, half of all
15 – year – olds would die of AIDS.
For
the entire sub –Saharan region, the average level of infection among adults was
8.8 percent of Botswana’s population was infected, 34 percent of Zimbabwe’s,
31 percent of Lesotho’s, and 33 percent of Swaziland’s. Family life had been
destroyed by the deaths of hundreds of thousands of married couples, who left
more than 11 million orphans to fend for themselves. Gangs and rebel armies
forced thousands of orphans to join them. While crime and violence were rising,
agriculture was in decline as orphaned farm children tried desperately to
remember had to manage on their own. Labor productivity had been cut by 50
percent in the hardest – hit nations, school and hospital systems were
decimated, and entire national economies were on the verge of collapse.
With
its huge burden of AIDS illnesses, African nation desperately needed medicines,
both antibiotics to treat the many opportunistic diseases that strike AIDS
victims and HIV antiretrovirals that can indefinitely prolong the lives of
people with AIDS. Unfortunately, the people of sub – Saharan Africa could not
afford the prices that the major pharmaceutical drug companies charged for
their drugs. The major drug companies, for example, charged $10,000 to $ 15,000
for a year’s supply the antiretrovirals they marketed in the United
States. Yet the average per –person annual income in sub – Saharan Africa was
$500. the AIDS crisis in sub – Saharan Africa posed a major moral problem for
the drug companies of the developed world: How should they respond to the
growing needs of this terribly destitute region of the world? These problems
were especially urgent for the companies that held patents on several AIDS
antiretrovirals, such as GlaxoSmithKline and Bristol- Myers Squibb.
GlaxoSmithKline,
a British pharmaceutical company founded in 1873, with 2003 revenues of $38.2
billion and profits of $8 billion, held the patents to five antiretrovirals it
had created. Formed from the merger of three large drug companies (Glaxo,
Burroughs Wellcome, and SmithKline Beecham), it was one of the world ‘s largest
and most profitable companies. Bristol – Myers Squibb, an American
pharmaceutical company founded in 1858, was also the result of mergers (between
Squibb and Bristol – Myers). It had 2003 profit of $$3.1 billion on revenues of
$20.8 billion ad had created and now held the patents to two antiretrovirls.
Although
AIDS was first noticed in the United State in 1981 when the CDC noted an
alarming increase of a rare cancer among gay man, it is now known to have
afflicted a Bantu male in 1959, and possibly jumped from monkeys to humans
centuries earlier. In 1982, with 1,614 diagnosed cases in the United State, the
disease was termed AIDS (for “acquired immune deficiency syndrome”), and the
following year French scientists identified HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus)
as its cause.
HIV
is a virus that destroys the immune system that the body uses to fight off
infections and diseases. If the immune system breaks down, the body is unable
to fight off illnesses and becomes afflicted with various “opportunistic
diseases “- infections and cancers. The virus, which can tack up to 10 year to
break down a person’s immune system, is transmitted through the exchange of
body fluids including blood, semen, vaginal fluids, and breast milk.
The
main modes of infection are through unprotected sex, intravenous drug use, and
child birth. In 1987, Burroughs Wellcome (now part of GlaxoSmithKline)
developed AZT, the first FDA-approved antiretroviral, that is, a drug that
attacks the HIV virus itself. When wellcome priced AZT at $10,000 for a year’s
supply, it was accused of price gouging, forcing a price reducing of 20 percent
the following year. In 1991, Bristol- Myers Squibb developed didanosine, a new
class of antiretroviral drug called nucleoside reverse transcriptase
inhibitors. In 1995, Roche developed saquinavir, a third new class of
antiretroviral drug called a protease inhibitor, and the following year Roxane
Laboratories announced nevirapine, another new class of antiretrovirals called
nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors . By the middle 1990s, drug
companies had developed four distinct classes of antiretrovirals, as several
drugs that attacked the opportunistic diseases that afflict AIDS patients.
In
1996, Dr. David Ho was honored for his discovery that by taking a combination-
a “cocktail”- of three of than four classes of antiretroviral drags, it is
possible to kill off virtually all of than HIV virus in a patient’s body,
allowing the immune system to recover, and thereby effectively bringing the
disease into remission. Costing upwards of $20,000 a year (the medicines had to
be taken for the rest of the patient’s life), the new drug treatment enabled
AIDS patients to once again live normal, healthy lives. By 1998, the large drug
companies would have developed 12 different antiretroviral drugs that could be
used in various combination to from the “cocktails” that could bring the
disease into remission.
The combination drug regimes, however, were complicated
and had to be exactly adhered to. Several dozen pills had to be taken at
various specific times during the day and night, every day, or the treatment
would fail to work and the patient’s HIV virus could be come resistant to the
drugs. If the patient then spread the disease to others, it would give rise to
drug – resistant version of the disease. To ensure patients were carefully
following the regimes, doctors or nurses carefully monitored their patients and
made sure patients took the drugs on schedule. In 1998, as more U.S AIDS
patients began the new combination drug treatment, the number of annual AIDS
deaths dropped for the fist time in the United states.
Globally,
however, the situation was not improving. By 2000, according to the United
Nations, there were approximately 5 million people who were being newly
infected with AIDS each year, bringing the worldwide total to about 34,300,000,
more than the entire population of Australia. Approximately 3,000,000 adults
and children died of AIDS each year.
The
price of the new combination antiretroviral treatment limited the use of these
drugs to the United States and other wealthy nation. Personal incomes in sub –
Saharan Africa were too low to afford what the combination treatments cost at
the point. Yet the countries of sub – Saharan Africa were emerging as the ones
most desperately in need of the new treatment. Of the 5 million annual new
cases of ADIS, 4 million -70 percent – were located in sub- Saharan countries.
Numerous
global health and human rights groups – such as Oxfam – urged the large drug
companies to lower the prices of their drugs to levels that patients in poor
developing nations could afford. By 2001, a combination regime of three
antiretroviral AIDS drugs still cost about $10,000 a year. Although the
formulas for making the antiretroviral drugs were often easy to obtain, few
poor countries had the ability to manufacture the drugs, and in most nations
that had the capacity to manufacture drugs the large drug companies of the
developed world had obtained “patents” that gave them the exclusive right to
manufacture those drugs in effect making the drug formulas the private property
of the large drug
companies.
GlaxoSmithKline,
Bristol – Myers Squibb, and the other big drug companies did not at this time
want to lower their prices. First, they argued that it was better for poor
countries to spend their limited resources on educational programs that might
prevent new cases of AIDS than on expensive drugs that would merely extend life
for the small number of patients that might receive the drugs. Second, they
argued that the combination drug “cocktails” had to be administered by
hospitals, clinics, doctors, or nurses who could monitor patients to make sure
they were taking the drugs according to the prescribed regimes and to ensure
that drug- resistant versions of the virus did not develop. But most AIDS
patients in developing nations such as those in sub-Saharan Africa, the big
drug companies argued, had limited access to medical personnel.
Third, they
argued, the development of new drugs was extremely expensive. The cost of the
research, development, and testing required to bring a new drug to market, they
claimed, was between $100 million. Besides the research involved, new drugs had
to be tested in three phases: Phase I trials to test for initial
safety: Phase II trials to test to make sure the drugs work:
and Phase III trials that were wide-scale tests on hundreds of
people to determine safety, efficacy, and dosage. If the big drug companies
were to recover what they had invested in developing the drugs they marketed,
and were to retain the capacity to fund new drug development in the future,
they argued, they had to maintain their high prices. If they started giving
away their drugs, they would stop making new drugs. Finally, the drug companies
of the developed nations feared that any drugs they discounted or gave away in
the developing world would be smuggled back and sold in the United States and
other developed
nations.
Critics
of the drug companies were not convinced by these arguments. Doctors Without
Borders- a group of thousands of doctors who contributed their services to poor
patients in developing nations around the world- said that although prevention
programs were important, never- the less hundreds of thousands of lives-even
millions-could be saved if drug companies lowered their antiretroviral and
opportunistic disease drug prices to levels poor nations could afford.
Moreover, a September 2003 report by the International AIDS Society stated that
studies in Brazil, Haiti, Thailand, and South Africa showed that patients in
remote rural areas adhered exactly to their drug regimes with the help of
low-skilled paramedics and that the development of resistance was not a major
problem. In fact, in the United States 50 percent of AIDS patients had
developed drug resistance but only 6.6 percent of AIDS patients studied in
developing nations had developed resistance. By now, some of the antiretroviral
combination treatments were being combined into blister packs that were easier
to administer and monitor.
Other
critics challenged the financial arguments of the drug companies. The cost
estimates of new drug development used by the drug companies, they claimed,
were inflated. For example, the figure of $500 million that drug companies
often cited as the cost of developing a new drug was based on a study
that inflated its cost estimates by doubling the actual
out-of-pocket costs companies invested in a drug to account for so-called
“opportunity” costs (what the money would have earned if it had been invested
in some other way). Moreover, these cost estimates assumed that the drug was
being developed from scratch, when in fact most of the new drugs marketed by
companies were based on research for other drugs already on the market or on
research conducted by universities, government, and other publicly funded
laboratories. Critics also questioned whether companies would be driven to stop
investing in new drugs if they lowered the pries of their AIDS drugs.
Since
1988 the average return on equity of drug companies averaged an unusually high
30 percent a year. Public Citizen, in a report entitled “2002 Drug Industry
Profits,” noted that the ten biggest drug companies had total profits in 2002
of $35.9 billion, equal to more than half of the $69.6 billion in profits
netted by all other companies in the Fortune 500 list of companies (the 500
largest U.S. companies). The ten big drug companies made 17 cents for every
dollar of revenue, while the median earnings for other Fortune 500 companies
was 3.1 cents per dollar of revenue; the return on assets of the big companies
was 14.1 percent while the median for other companies was 2.3 percent.
During
the 1990s, the big drug companies in the Fortune 500 had a return on revenues
that was 4 times the median of all other industries, and in 2002 it was at
almost 6 times the median. Finally, the report noted, while the big drug
companies spent only 14 percent of their revenues on drug research, they plowed
17 percent of their revenues into profit and 31 percent into marketing and
administration. GlxoSmithKline itself had a 2003 profit margin of 21 percent, a
return on equity of 122 percent, and a return on assets of 26 percent;
Bristol-Myers Squibb had a profit margin of 19 percent, return on equity of 36
percent, and return on assets of 14 percent. These figures, critics argued,
showed that it was well within the capacity of the big drug companies to lower
prices for AIDS drug to the developing nations, even if a small portion of
these drug ended up being smuggled back into the United States.
GlaxoSmithkline,
Bristol-Myers Squibb, and the other big drug companies, however, held their
ground. Throughout the 1990s, they had lobbied hard to ensure that governments
around the world in the medicines they had created. Before 1997, countries had
different protection on so-called “intellectual property” (intellectual
property consists of intangible property such as drug formulas, designs, plans,
software, new inventions, etc.) some countries, like the United States, gave
drug companies the exclusive right to keep anyone else from making their newly
invented drug for a period of 15-20 year (this right was called a “patent”);
other countries allowed companies fever year of protection for their patents,
and many developing countries (where little research was done and where few
things intellectual property as something that belonged to everyone and so
something that should not be patented. Some countries, like India, offered
patents that protected the process by which a drug was made but allowed others
to make the same drug formula if they could figure out another process by which
to make it.
Arguing
that research and development would stop if new invention such as drug were not
protected by strong laws enforcing their patents, GlxoSmithKline, Bristol-
Meyers Squibb, and the other major drug companies intensely lobbied the World
Trade Organization (WTO) to require all WTO members to provide uniform patent
protections on all intellectual property. Pressured by the governments of the
large drug companies (especially the United States), the WTO in 1997 adopted an
agreement known as TRIPS, shorthand for Trade-Related aspects of Intellectual
Property rights. Under the TRIPS agreement, all countries that were members of
the WTO were required to give patent holders (such as drug companies) exclusive
right to make and market their inventions for a period of 20 yea in their
countries. Developing countries like India, Brazil, Thailand, Singapore, China,
and the sub – Saharan nation-were give until 2006 before they had to implement
the TRIPS agreement. Also, I a “national emergency” WTO developing countries
could use “compulsory licensing” to force a company that owned a patent on a
drug to license another company in the same developing country to make a copy
of that drug. And in a national emergency WTO developing countries could also
import drug from foreign companies even if the patent holder had not licensed
those foreign companies to make the drug. The new TRIPS agreement was a victory
for companies in developed nation, which held patents for most of the world’s
new inventions, while it restricted developing nation whose own laws had
earlier allowed them to copy these inventions freely. The big drug companies
were not willing in 2000 to surrender their hard-won 1997 victory at the WTO.
Because
the AIDS crisis was now a major global problem, the United Nation in 2000
launched the “Accelerated Access Program,” a program under which
drug companies were encouraged to offer poor countries price
discounts on their AIDS drug. GlaxoSmithKline and then Bristol-Myers Squibb
joined the program, but the price discounts they were willing to make were
insufficient to make their drug affordable to sub-Saharan nations, and only a
few people in few countries received AIDS drug under the program.
Everything
changed in February 2001 when Cipla, an Indian drug company, made a surprise
announcement: It had copied three of the patented drug of three major
pharmaceutical companies (Bristol-Myers Squibb, GlxoSmithKline, and Boehringer
Ingelheim) and put them together into a combination antiretroviral course of
therapy. Cipla said it would manufacture and sell a year’s supply of its copy
of this antiretroviral “cocktail” for $350 to Doctors Without Borders. This was
about 3 percent of the price the big drug companies who held the patents on the
drugs were charging for the same drugs.
GlxosmithKline
and Bristol-Myers Squibb objected that Cipla was stealing their property since
it was copying the drug that they had spent million to create and on which they
still held the patent. Cipla responded that its activities were legal since the
TRIPS agreement did not take effect in India until 2006, and Indian patent low
allowed it to make the drugs so long as it used a new “process.” Moreover,
Cipla claimed, since AIDS was a national emergency in many developing
countries, particularly the sub-Saharan nations, the TRIPS agreement allowed
sub-Saharan nation to import Cipla ‘s AIDS drugs. In August 2001, Ranbaxy,
another Indian drug company, announced that it, too, would start selling a copy
of the same antiretroviral combination drug Cipla was selling but would price
it at $295 for a year’s supply. In April 2002, Aurobindo, also an Indian
company, announced it would sell a combination drug for $209. Hetero, likewise
an Indian company, announced in March 2003 that it would sell a combination
drug at $201. By 2004, the Indian company were producing versions of the four
main drug combination recommended by the World Health Organization for the
treatment of AIDS. All four combination contained copies of one or two of
GlaxoSmithKline’s patented antiretroviral drugs and two of the combination
contained copies of Bristol-Meyer Squibb’s patented drugs.
The
CEO of GlaxoSmithKline branded the Indian companies as “pirates” and asserted
that what they were doing was theft even if they broke no laws. Pressured by
the discounted prices of the Indian companies and by world opinion, however,
GlaxoSmithKline and Bristol-Myers Squibb now decided to further discount the
AIDS drugs they owned. They did not, however, lower their prices down to the
levels of the Indian companies; their lowest discounted prices in 2001 yielded
a price of $931 for 1-year supply of the combination of AIDS drugs Cipla was
selling for $350. In 2002 and 2003, new discounts brought the combination down
to $727, still too high for most sub-Saharan AIDS victims and their government.
With
little to impede its progress, the AIDS epidemic continued in 2994. Swaziland
announced in 2003 that 38.6 percent of its adult population was now infected
with AIDS. THE United Nation estimated that every day 14,000 people were newly
infected with AIDS. The World Health Organization announced that only 300,000
people in developing countries were receiving antiretroviral drugs, and of the
4.1 million people who were infected in sub-Saharan Africa only about 50,000
had access to the drugs. The World Health Organization announced in 2003 that
it would try to collect from governments the funds needed to bring
antiretrovirals to at least 3 million people by the end of 2005.
Questions
- Explain, in
light of their theories, what Locke, Smith, Ricardo, and Marx would probably
say about the events in this case.
- Explain which
view of property-Locke’s or Marx’s- lies behind the positions of the drug
companies GlaxoSmithKline and Bristol-Myers Squibb and of the Indian companies
such as Cipla. Which of the two group-GlaxoSmithKline and Bristol-Myers Squibb
on the one hand, and the Indian companies on the other –do you think holds the
correct view of property in this case? Explain your answer.
- Evaluate the
position of Cipla and of GlaxoSmithKline in terms of utilitarianism, right,
justice, and caring. Which of these two positions do you think is correct from
an ethical point of view?
Case – 2 Playing Monopoly: Microsoft
On November 5,
1999, then the richest man in the world, learned that a federal judge, Thomas
Jackson, had just issued “findings of fact” declaring that his company,
Microsoft, “enjoys monopoly power” and that it had used its monopoly power to
“harm consumers” and crush competitors to maintain its Windows monopoly and to
establish a new monopoly in Web browsers by bundling its Internet Explorer with
Windows. On the day the judgment was issued, Microsoft stock began its decline.
The decline was hastened by an announcement in February 2000 that
the European Commission, which enforces European Union lows on competition and
monopolization, had been investigating Microsoft’ anticompetitive practices in
server software since 1997 and was extending its investigation to look into
Microsoft’s bundling of its Windows Media Player with Windows.
Two months
later, on April 3,2000,U.S. judge Thomas Jackson issued a second verdict,
concluding on the basis of his earlier findings of fact that Microsoft had
violated U.S. antitrust low and was subject to the penalties allowed by the
low. The price of Microsoft stock plunged, bringing the entire stock market
down with it. Two short months later, on June 7,2000, Judge Jackson ordered
that Microsoft should be broken up into two separate companies-one devoted to
operating systems and the other to applications such as word processing,
spreadsheets, and Web browsers. With the price of Microsoft stock now skidding,
Gates, who was no longer the richest man in the world, vowed that Microsoft
would appeal this and any similar verdict and would never be broken apart.1
Bill
Gates was born in 1955 in Bremerton, Washington. When he was 13 years old, his
grammar school acquired a computer terminal, and by the end of the year he had
written his first software program (for playing tictac-toe). During high
school, he held a few entry-level programming jobs. Gates enrolled in Harvard
University in 1974, but quickly lost interest in classes and quit to start a
software business in Albuquerque, New Mexico, with a friend, Paul Allen, whom
he had known since grammar school in Seattle.
At the time, the first small but
primitive personal computers were being manufactured as kits for hobbyists.
These computers, like the Altair 8080 computer (which used Intel’s new 8080
microprocessor, had no keyboard, no screen, and only 256 bytes of memory), had
no accompanying software and were extremely difficult to program because they
had to use “machine code” (consisting entirely of sequences of zero and ones),
which is virtually incomprehensible to humans. Gates and Allen
together revised a program called BASIC (Beginner’s All – Purpose Symbolic
Instruction Code, a program written several years earlier by two engineers who
gave it away for free), which allowed users to write their own programs using
an understandable set of English instructions, and they adapted it so that it
would work on the Altair 8080. They sold the adaptation to the maker of the
Altair 8080 for $3,000.
In
1977, Apply Computer marketed the first personal computer (PC) aimed at
consumers, and by 1978, more than 300 dealers were selling the “Apply II.” That
year, Gates and Allen began writing software programs for the Apply II, renamed
their company Microsoft, and moved it to Seattle, where, with 13 employees, it
ended the year with revenues of $1.4 million. In 1979, two hobbyists developed
VisiCalc, the first spreadsheet program, for the Apply II, and Microsoft
developed MS Word, a rudimentary word processor for the Apply II. With these
new software “applications,” sales of the Apply II took off and the personal
computer market was born. By 1980, Microsoft, which continued writing programs
for the growing personal computer market, had earning of $8 million.
In
1980, IBM belatedly decided to enter the growing market for personal computers.
By now many other companies had flocked into the PC market, including Radio
Shack, Commodore, COMPAQ, AT&T, Xerox, DEC, Data General, and Wang. By
1984, some 350 companies around the world would be making PCs. Because IBM
needed to enter the market quickly, it decided to assemble its computer from
components that were readily available on the market. A key component that IBN
needed for its computer was an operating system. An operating system is the
software that allows application programs (like a world processor, spreadsheet,
browser, or game) to run on a particular machine. Every computer must have an
operating system or it cannot run any application programs.
The operating
system coordinates the various components of the computer (keyboard inputs,
monitor, printer, ports, etc. and contains the application programming
interface (API), which consists of the codes that application use to “command”
the computer to carry out its function. Application programs, such as a games
or world processors, are written so that they will run on a specific operating
system by making use of that operating system’s API to make the computer carry
out the program’s commands. Unfortunately, a program written for one operating
system will not work on another operating system. Most of the companies making
PCs had developed their own operating systems, although several made use of one
called CP/M, which was written to work on many different computers,
applications developed to run on CP/M. This meant that an application did not
have to be rewritten for each different kind of computer, but could be written
once for CP/M and would then on any computer using CP/M.
IBM
needed an operating system quickly and approached the maker of CP/M for a
license to use CP/M but was turned down. The somewhat desperate IBM
representatives then met with Bill Gates to ask whether Microsoft had one
available. Although Microsoft at the time did not own an operating system, Bill
Gates told IBM that he could provide one to them. Immediately after the IBM
meeting, Bill Gates went to a friend who he knew had written an operating
system that was a “knock-off of CP/M” and that could work on the computer IBM
was planning. Without telling his friend about the meeting with IBM, Gates
offered to buy his friend’s operating system for $60,000. The friend agreed.
After some tweaking, Microsoft licensed the system to IBM as MS-DOS, with the
proviso that Microsoft could also license MS-DOS to other computer
manufactures. When IBM started mass-producing its personal computer in 1981
(IBM’s share of the market went froe nothing in 1981, to 10 percent in 1983,
and 40 percent in1987) and other computer makers began producing copies of
IBM’s computer, MS-DOS become the standard operating system for personal
computers built according to IBM’s standards. Bill Gates’s company was on its
way to becoming a billion-dollar firm.
Because
an application program has to be written to work on a specific operating
system, and because so many personal computers were now using the MS-DOS
operating system, software companies were much more willing to created programs
for the large market of MS-DOS users than for the much smaller numbers of
people using other competing operating system numbers of people using other
competing operating systems. As thousands of new software programs were
developed for MS-DOS-including Microsoft’s own spreadsheet, Multiplan, and its
word processor, MS Word even more people adopted MS-DOS, initiating what
economists call a network effect. A product creates a network effect when the
value of the product to a buyer depends on how many other people have already
bought the product. A standard example of a product that creates a network
effect is a communication network like a telephone network.
The more people
that are connected to a telephone network, the more valuable it will be for a
new subscriber to be connected to the network since he can communicate with
more people. Many products besides communication networks can give rise to
network effects, including, of course, operating systems. The more people that
own an operating system, the more that software companies are willing to write
programs for that operating system. The more software program they write for
the operating system, the more people want to buy that operating system.
Because of this network effect, the proportion of computers using MS-DOS
quickly increased, and the proportion of computers using other operating
systems (such as CP/M, Apply computer’s, or Atari’s or commodore’s) declined.
However,
in 1984, Apple Computer developed an innovative new operating system for its
own computers that used intuitive graphics or pictures that let users issue
commands to the computer by selecting icons and pull-down manus on the screen
using the mouse. The new operating system was tremendously popular, and Apple
sales began to climb. In 1987, however, Microsoft began selling Windows, a new
operating system for IBM-compatible computers that copied Apple’s operating
system. Unlike MS-DOS, which had used obscure combinations of characters to
issue commands to the computer, Windows used graphics that were similar to
Apple’s, had virtually the same pull-down menus and icons, and the same usage
of the same mouse. Apple sued Microsoft
on the grounds that, in copying the “look
and feel” of their operating system, Microsoft had stolen a key piece of their
copyrighted property. Apple lost the suit and, with the loss of its key
software advantage, its market share withered away.
Although
early versions of Windows were not very good quality improved over
the years. In 1995 Microsoft issued Windows 95, in 1998 it issued windows 98,
in 2000 it issued the Millennium version of Windows, and two years later
it issued Windows XP. The next version of Windows was
code-named “Longhorn.” As the new millennium began, Microsoft controlled 90
percent of the personal computer operating system market-a virtual monopoly-
and Bill Gates was fabulously
rich. .
In
the early 1990s, however, two threats to Microsoft’s monopoly had emerged.2 one
was Netscape, an Internet browser, and the other was Java, a programming
language. The Internet is a network through which digital information,
pictures, sounds, text, and other digital data can be sent from one computer to
another. To make these data usable, a user’s computer must be connected to the
Internet and must have a software program called a browser. The browser takes
the digital data that come through the Internet and transforms them into an
intelligible picture or text that can be displayed on the user’s computer
screen or into a sound that can be played on the computer’s speakers. However,
a browser is not only capable of interpreting digital data that come over the
Internet, it can also execute the instructions of software programs, whether
those programs are sent over the Internet or reside in the user’s own computer.
In this respect, a browser functions much like an operating system. Some people
predicted that someday every computer might rely on a browser instead of an
operating system to run software programs. Although the browser would still
need some rudimentary operating system to run, this operating system did not have
to be Windows. Windows could become obsolete. Netscape, a company that began
selling a browser named Navigator on December 15, 1994, quickly captured 70
percent of the browser market. In May 1995, Bill Gates wrote an internal memo
to his executives, warning:
A
new competitor “born” on the Internet is Netscape. Their browser is dominant,
with a 70% usage share, allowing them to determine which network extension will
catch on. They are pursuing a multi-platform strategy where they move the key
API [applications programming in derlying operating system.]
In
addition to the browser threat, Microsoft was also worried about Java, a
programming language that Sun Microsystems, a manufacture of computer hardware
and software, had developed in May 1995. programs that are written in the Java
language can operate on any computer equipped with java software, regardless of
the operating system the computer used. In this respect, java software also
could function like an operating system and also threatened to make Widows
obsolete. In an internal memo, a Microsoft senior executive stated that Java
was “our major threat,” and in September 1996, Bill Gates wrote an e-mail
saying, “This scares the hell out of me,” and asked manager a to make it a top
priority to neutralize Java.
To
make matters worse, Java and Netscape joined forces. Netscape agreed to
incorporate the Java software into its Navigator browser so that any programs
written in Java would work on a computer that was using Netscape. This meant
that short programs written in Java could be sent over the Internet and then
run on the user’s computer through its Netscape browser. This also meant that
Java programs did not need windows, but could run on any computer using any
operating system so long as it was also using Netscape’s Navigator Browser.
Because Java was now being distributed together with Netscape, the number of
computers equipped with Java rapidly multiplied. A Microsoft had become the
“major distribution vehicle” for Java.
According
to the “findings of fact” accepted by the judge presiding over the” major
distribution vehicle” for Java.
According
to the “findings of fact” accepted by the judge presiding over the Microsoft
antitrust trial, Microsoft quickly embarked on a campaign to undercut the
threat that Netscape now posed to its monopoly. First, a team of Microsoft
executives met with Netscape’s executives in June 1995. Microsoft’s people
proposed that Microsoft should provide the browser for Windows computers while
Netscape should provide browsers for all other computers essentially the 10
percent of computers that ran on Apple’s operating system, on OS/2, or on other
relatively minor operating system. A memo written the next day by a Microsoft
executive who was percent stated that a goal of the meeting was to “establish
Microsoft ownership of the Internet client platform for Win95.” Netscape
refused to go along with this plan to divide the browser market. Microsoft then
refused to share the codes for Windows 95 so that Netscape would be unable to
develop a browser for Windows 95. Netscape had to wait several months after
Windows 95 was released before it finally got hold of its codes and was finally
able to develop a new version of Navigator that would take advantage of the
Windows 95 applications interface.
Microsoft
also develop its own browser by borrowing a browser program it had
earlier licensed from Spy-glass Inc, renaming it Interner Explorer,
and copying many of Netscape’s features onto its. (The chairman of Spyglass
later complained that “whenever you license technology to Microsoft, you have
to understand it can someday build it itself, drop it into the operating
system, and put you out of that business.” Unfortunately, when Microsoft tried
to sell its browser in 1995, users felt it was inferior to Netscape and sales
lagged. Microsoft continued working on its browser and its fourth version,
Internet Explorer 4.0, released in late 1997, finally began to be compared
favorably to Netscape’s browser. Still, few people were buying internet
Explorer. Microsoft then decided to use its operating system monopoly to
undercut Netscape. In February 1997, Christian Wildfeuer, a Microsoft executive,
suggested in an internal memo that it would “be very hard to increase browser
share on the merits’ of internet Explorer 4 alone. It will be more important to
leverage our Operating System asset to make people use Internet Explorer
instead of Netscape’s Navigator.” If Internet Explorer was bundled together
with Windows, so that when Windows was installed on a computer Internet
Explorer was also automatically installed, then users would tend to use
Internet Explorer rather then go through the expense and trouble of purchasing
and installing Netscape.
Accordingly, Microsoft incorporated a copy of Internet
Explorer into Windows 95 that automatically installed itself when Windows was
installed. Windows 98 went farther by integrating Internet Explorer into the
operating system so that it was extremely difficult for a user even to remove
Internet Explorer. Moreover, when a user “uninstalled” Internet Explorer, it
stayed in the computer and still appeared when Windows 98 was running certain
commands. Although this integration made Windows 98 run more slowly and
consumed resources on the user’s computer, it also made it much more difficult
and risky for users to try to replace Internet Explorer with Netscape
Navigator. Microsoft claimed that it was now giving Internet Explorer away “for
free,” but skeptics pointed out that the costs of developing the browser had to
be recovered from sales of Windows and so a portion of what the consumer paid
for a copy of Windows went to pay for the costs of developing the browser.
Microsoft
did more than bundle Internet Explorer with Windows. According to the court’s
“findings of fact,” Microsoft required any computer maker that wanted Windows
on its computers to agree that it would not remove Windows Explorer and would
not promote Netscape’s browser. If a computer maker also agreed to not even
give its customers a copy of Netscape, Microsoft discounted the price of
Windows. Because Microsoft’s monopoly meant that computer manufacture either
had to install Windows on their computers or make them virtually useless,
manufactures had no choice but to sign the agreements that shut Netscape out of
the market. Although users were still able to buy a copy of Netscape from a
retailer, the number of users doing this declined. Not only would purchasing a
copy of Netscape require paying extra for software that would do much of what
their installed Internet Explorer could already do but also required that trick
task of removing Internet Explorer from their computers and in selling Netscape
in its place. Not surprisingly, Netscape’s share of the market rapidly dropped,
and Internet Explorer’s rapidly rose- a successful outcome of Wildfeuer’s
strategy “to leverage our Operating System asset to make people use Internet
Explorer instead of Navigator.”
Microsoft
dealt with its Java threat by asking Sun Microsystems for the right to license
and distribute Java with its Windows system. Sun Microsystems gave Microsoft
that right, not knowing that Microsoft was planning to change Java. The version
of Java that Microsoft distributed was a version that incorporated several
changes that would no longer allow regular Java programs to run on computers
using Microsoft’s Java. Thus, there were now two versions of Java,
and the version that most users were getting installed with their Windows
computers was a version that was incompatible with the regular version of
Java and that Microsoft now owned. Microsoft had apparently planned
this move because an earlier internal Microsoft document stated that it was a
“strategic objective” for Microsoft to “Kill cross-platform Java” by expanding
the “polluted Java market”- a reference to Microsoft’s own “polluted” version
of Java. Because all Windows-based computers now incorporated a copy of Microsoft’s
Java, not Sun’s. Microsoft encouraged these developers by offering them special
technical support and inducements. In effect, Microsoft had turned Java into a
part of Windows so that there was now little threat that Windows would be
rendered obsolete by Java.
But
on May 18, 1998, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), then headed by U.S.
Attorney General Janet Reno (an appointee of Democratic President Bill
Clinton), filed an antitrust suit Microsoft in Judge Jackson’s court, claiming
that the company had violated the Sherman Antitrust Act by engaging in “a
pattern of anticompetitive practices designed to thwart browser competition on
the merits, to deprive customers of choice between alternative browsers, and to
exclude Microsoft’s Internet browser competitors,” especially Netscape and
java.3 the DOJ claimed that Microsoft had violated the
antitrust act in four ways:
(a) Microsoft had forced computer companies that
used its Windows operating system to sing agreements that they would not
license, distribute, or promote software products that competed with
Microsoft’s own software products;
(b) Microsoft “tied” its own browser,
Internet Explorer, to its Windows operating system so that customers who
purchased Windows also had to get Internet Explorer, although these were
separate products and tying the two products together degraded the performance
of Windows;
(c) Microsoft had attempted to use its operating system monopoly to
gain a new monopoly in the Internet browser market by forcing computer companies
that used its Windows operating system to agree to leave Internet Explorer as
the default browser and to preinstall or promote the browser of any other
company; and
(d) Microsoft had a monopoly in the market for PC operating system
and had used anticompetitive and predatory tactics to maintain its monopoly
power. As a penalty to ensure that Microsoft not engaged in such behaviors
again, the DOJ recommended that that the part of the company devoted to
cresting Windows should be spun off and separated from the part that developed
browsers and other software applications.
On
June 7, 2000, Judge Jackson found Microsoft guilty of counts b, c and d, and
ordered that the company be broken up into two separate companies-one to
develop and market operating systems and the other to develop and market all
other Microsoft programs. Although the judge could have simply ordered
Microsoft to cease engaging in the illegal practices, he feared that policing
such an order would require so much government oversight that it was simply not
practical. The judge also ruled that the two new companies would not be allowed
to share any technical information with each other that they did not share with
all their other customers. Not could Microsoft punish or threaten any computer
manufacturers for distributing or promoting the products or services of its
competitors. Finally, Judge Jackson ordered that Microsoft had to let computer
manufactures remove any Microsoft applications from its Windows operating
system.4 the Judge ruled, however, that Microsoft would not
have to implement his orders until it had time to appeal his decision. In a
defensive “white paper,” Microsoft stated:
Antitrust policy
seeks to promote low prices, high output, and rapid innovation. On all three measures,
the personal computer software industry generally-and Microsoft in
particular-is a model of competitiveness…. Market share numbers do not reflect
the highly dynamic nature of the software industry, where entire business
segment can disappear virtually overnight as new technologies are developed.
Microsoft
claimed that it was responsible for much of the innovation that characterized
the software industry. In addition, it claimed that its actions, including its
decision to bundle Internet Explorer with Windows and its decision to “improve”
Java by changing it, were all done to help consumers and give them more value
for their money.
Microsoft
appealed the judge’s verdict, and on June 28, 2001, a federal appeals court
reversed Judge Jack-son’s breakup penalty. The federal appeals court held that,
based on interviews he gave to the news media during the case, Jackson appeared
to be biased against Microsoft, and this bias might have affected the severity
of the penalty he had imposed on the company. Although Jackson’s findings of
fact were to remain in place, the appeals court held that a new penalty would
have to be devised for the company.
The
previous year, however, George W. Bush had been inaugurated president and his
administration had as signed a new person, John Ashcroft, as the new attorney
general to head up the Department of Justice. According to Edward Roeder, an
expert on corporate political contributions, in the previous 5 year Microsoft
had begun contributing heavily to the Republican Party’s election campaigns,
contributing about 75 percent of its $6million-dollar-a-year 2000 political
contributions to Republicans, creating “an unprecedented campaign to influence
the new Administration’s antitrust policy,” and to “escape from the trial with
its monopoly intact.”5 on September 6,2001, the new
Republican-appointed head of the DOJ announced that it would no longer seek the
breakup of Microsoft but would, instead, seek a lesser penalty.
Two months
later, on November 2,2001, the DOJ announced that it had reached a settlement
with Microsoft. According to the agreement, Microsoft would share its
application programming interface with other rival software companies who
wanted to write applications (such as word processing programs or games) that
could run on Windows; it would have to give computer makers and users the
ability to hide icons for Windows applications, such as the icon for Internet
Explorer or for Microsoft’s digital media player; it could not
prevent competing programs from being installed on a Windows computer; it could
not retaliate against computer makers who used competing software. A
three-person panel would be given complete access to Microsoft’s records and
source code for the next 5 years to ensure that Microsoft complied with the
agreement. Microsoft; however, would not be prevented from bundling whatever
software programs it wanted with its Windows operating system.
The new judge
appointed to case, Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, reviewed the settlement and on
November 1,2003, she handed down a decision essentially ratifying the
settlement between Microsoft and the DOJ. The state of Massachusetts and two
computer trade groups, however, who objected to the settlement as a mere slap
on the wrist, filed an appeal, arguing that Microsoft’s monopolistic behaviors
drserved tougher sanctions. That appeal came to an end on June 30, 2004, when a
federal appeals court ruled that the 2001 settlement satisfied the legal
requirements for addressing Microsoft’s violations of antitrust laws. By that
time,, when a federal appeals court ruled that the 2001 settlement satisfied
the legal requirements for addressing Microsoft’s violations of antitrust laws.
By that time,, when a federal appeals court ruled that the 2001 settlement satisfied
the legal requirements for addressing Microsoft’s violations of antitrust laws.
By that time, Microsoft had settled several suits with other states and
companies and had paid a total of $1.5 billion to these
parties.
Microsoft’s
monopoly woes were not quite over, however. In 1997, the European Union’s
“Competition Commissioner” had announced that the European Union was
investigating allegations that Microsoft had illegally used its Windows monopoly
power to try to establish a new monopoly in the server market by refusing to
share its Windows application programming interface with companies making
software for servers (servers are computers that connect several other
computers together). If other companies are not given the Windows application
programming interfaces, they cannot write server programs that can smoothly
connect computers running Windows. Since only Microsoft had full access to its
Windows application programming interface, only Microsoft would be able to
write server programs for Windows computers, thereby giving it a new monopoly
in the server market.
In
2000, the European Commission expanded its investigation to look into how
Microsoft had bundled its Windows Media Player together with the company’s new
Widows 2000 operating system. Because all buyers of Windows 2000already had
Microsoft’s Digital Media Player installed on their computers, they were not
likely to buy a competitor’s digital media player. In this way, suggested the
commission, Microsoft would gain a new monopoly in the market for digital media
players.
In
April 2004, the European Commission issued its final ruling on its
investigations. It concluded that “Microsoft Corporation broke European Union competition
law by leveraging its near monopoly in the market for PC operating systems onto
the markets….for servers…and for media players.” The commission fined Microsoft
497 million euros (equivalent to about $613 million) and ordered it (1) to
disclose to competitors the interface required for their server software to
work with Windows computers and (2) to offer a version of Windows without
Microsoft’s own Digital Media Player.
Microsoft
immediately appealed this ruling to the European Court of First Instance. In
addition, it asked that the second order be suspended until the European Court
of First instance had ruled on its appeal. In June 2004, the European
Commission agreed that until the court ruled on the appeal, Microsoft did not
have to offer a version of Windows without its Digital Media Player. Experts on
European law said the appeal could take several years.
Meanwhile,
some government had stopped purchasing Windows and had instead adopted Linux, a
free “open source” operating system. Among these were Italy, Germany, Great
Britain, France, India, South Korea, China, Brazil and South Africa. Several
Companies, including Amazon.com, FedEx, and Google, had moved to Linux. A study
by Forrester Research found that 72 percent of companies it surveyed were
increasing their use of Linux, and over half of them were planning to replace
Windows with Linux.
Questions
1. Identify the behaviors that you think are
ethically questionable in the history of Microsoft. Evaluate the ethics of
these behaviors.
2. What characteristics of the market for
operating systems do you think created the monopoly market that Microsoft’s
operating system enjoyed? Evaluate this market in terms of utilitarianism,
rights, and justice (your analysis should make use of the textbook’s discussion
of the effects of monopoly markets on the utility of participants in the
market, on the moral rights of participants in the market, and on the
distribution of benefits and burdens among participants in the market), giving
explicit examples from the operating systems industry to illustrate your
points.
3. In your view, should the government have
sued Microsoft for violation of the antitrust laws? In your view, was Judge
Jackson’s order that Microsoft be broken into two companies fair to Microsoft?
Was Judge Kollar-Kotelly’s November 1, 2004 decision fair? Was the April 2004
decision of the European Commission fair to Microsoft? Explain your answers.
4. Who, if anyone, is harmed by
the kind of market that Microsoft’s operating system has enjoyed? Explain your
answer. What kind of public policies, if any, should we have to deal with
industries like the operating system industry?
Case - 3 Gas or Grouse?
The Pinedale
Mesa (sometime called the Pinedale Anticline) is a 40-mile-long mesa extending
north and south along the eastern side of Wyoming’s Green River Basin, an area
that is famous as the gateway to the hunting, fishing, and hiking treasures of
the Bridger-Teton wilderness. The city of Pinedale sits below the mesa, a short
distance from its northern end, surrounded by hundreds of recently drilled
wells ceaselessly pumping natural gas from the vast pockets that are buried
underneath the long mesa. Questar Corporation, an energy company with assets
valued at about $4 billion, is the main developer of the gas wells around the
city and up on the mesa overlooking the city. Occasionally elk, mule deer,
pronghorn antelope, and other wildlife, including the imperiled greater sage
grouse, descend from their habitats atop the mesa and gingerly make their way
around and between the Questar wells around Pinedale. Not surprisingly,
environmentalists are at war with Questar, whose expanding operations are
increasingly encroaching on the wildlife habitat that lies atop the mesa. Yet
the mesa is a desperately needed resource that provides the nation with a clean
and cheap source of energy.
Headquartered
in Salt Like City, Questar corporation drilled its first successful test well
on the pinedale Mesa in 1998. Extracting the gas under the mesa was not
feasible earlier because the gas was trapped in tightly packed sandstone that
prevented it from flowing to the wills and no one knew how to get it out. it
was not until the mid-1990s that the industry developed techniques for
fracturing the sandstone and freeing the gas. Full-scale drilling had to await
the completion of an environmental impact statement, which the Bureau of Land
Management (BLM) finished in mid-2000 when it approved drilling up to 900 wells
on federal lands sitting on top of the Pinedale Mesa. By the beginning of 2004,
Questar had drilled 76 wells on the 14,800 acres it leased from the federal
government and the Wyoming state government and had plans to eventually drill
at least 400 more wells. Energy experts welcome the new supply of natural gas,
which, because of its simple molecular structure (CH4), burns much more cleanly
than any other fossil fuel such as coal, diesel oil, or gasoline. Moreover, because
natural gas in extracted in the United States, its use reduced U.S. reliance on
foreign energy supplies. Businesses in and around Pinedale also welcomed the
drilling activity, which brought numerous benefits, including jobs, increased
tax revenues, and a booming local economy. Wyoming’s state government likewise
supported the activity since 60 percent of the state budget is based on
royalties the state receives from coal, gas, and oil operations.
Questar’s
wells on the mesa averaged 13,000 feet deep and cost $3.6 million each,
depending on the amount of fracturing that had to be done.1 Drilling a well
typically required clearing and leveling a 2- to 4- acre “pad” to support the
drilling rig and other equipment. One or two wells could be drilled at each
pad. Access road had to be run to the pad, and the well had to be connected to
a network of pipes that drew the gas from the wells and carried it to where it
could be stored and distributed. Each well produced waste liquids that had to
be stored in tanks at the pad and periodically hauled away on tanker trucks.
The
BLM, however, imposed several restrictions on Questar’s operations on the mesa.
Large areas of the mesa provide habitat for mule deer, pronghorn sheep, sage
grouse, and other species, and the BLM imposed drilling rules that were
designed to protect the wildlife species living on the mesa. Chief among these
was the sage grouse.
The
sage grouse is a colorful bird that today survives only in scattered pocket in
11 states. The grouse, which lives at elevations of 4,000 to 9,000 feet and is
dependent on increasingly rare old-growth sagebrush for food and to screen
itself from predators, is extremely sensitive to human activity. Houses,
telephone poles, or fences can draw hawks and ravens, which prey on the
ground-nesting grouse. It is estimated that 200 years ago the birds-known for
their distinctive spring “strutting” mating dance-numbered 2 million and were
common across the western United States. By the 1970s, their numbers had fallen
to about 400,000. a study completed in June 2004 by the Western Association of
Fish and Wildlife Agencies concluded that there were only between 140,000 and
250,000 of the birds left and that “we are not optimistic about the future.”
The dramatic decline on their number was blamed primarily on the destruction of
50 percent of their sage brush nesting and mating grounds (called leks), which
in turn was blamed on livestock grazing, new home construction, fires, and the
expanding acreage being given over to gas drilling and other mining activities.
Biologists believe that if its sagebrush habitats are not protected, the bird
will be so reduced in number by 2050 that it will never recover. According to
Pat Deibert, a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologist, “they need large
stands of unbroken sagebrush” and anything that breaks up those stands such as
roads, pipelines, or houses, effects them.2
In
order to protect the sage grouse, whose last robust population had nested for
thousands of years on the ideal sagebrush fields up on the mesa, the BLM
required that Questar’s roads, wells, and other structures had to be located a
quarter mile or more from grouse breeding grounds, and at least 2 miles from
nesting areas during breeding season. Some studies, however, conclude that
these protections were not sufficient to arrest the decline in the grouse
population. As wells proliferated in the area, they were increasingly taking up
land on which the grouse foraged and nested and were disturbing the sensitive
birds. Conservationists said that the BLM should increase the quarter-mile
buffer area around the grouse breeding grounds to at least 2-mile buffers.
In
May 2004, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced that it would being the
process of studying whether the sage grouse should be categorized as an
endangered species, which would bring it under the protection of the Endangered
Species Act, something conservationists had been urging the Fish and Wildlife
Service to do since 2000. Questar and other gas, oil, and mining companies
adamantly opposed having the grouse listed as an endangered species because
once this was done, large areas of federal land would be off-limits to
drilling, miming, and development. Since 80 percent of Wyoming is considered
sage grouse habitat, including much of the Pinedale Mesa, Questar’s drilling
plans would be severely compromised.
Questar
and other companies formed a coalition-the Partnership for the West-to lobby
the Bush administration to keep the grouse off the endangered species list. Led
by Jim Sims, a former communication director for President George W. Bush’s
energy Task Force, the coalition established a website where they called on
members to lobby “key administration players in Washington” and to “unleash
grass-roots opposition to a listing, thus providing some cover to the political
leadership at Department of Interior and throughout the administration.” The
coalition also suggested “funding scientific studies” designed to show that the
sage grouse was not endangered. According to Sims, the attempt to categorize
the grouse as endangered species was spearheaded by “environmental extremists
who have converged on the American west in an effort to stop virtually all
economic growth and development. They want to restrict business and industry at
every turn. They want to put our Western lands of –limits to all of us.”3 Dru
Bower, vice president of the petroleum Association of Wyoming,
said,”[endangered species] listings are not good for the oil and gas
industry, so anything we can do to prevent a species from being listed is good
for the industry. If the sage grouse is listed, it would have a dramatic effect
on oil and gas development in the state of Wyoming.”4
The
sage grouse was not the only species affected by Questar’s drilling operations.
The gas fields to which Questar held drilling rights was an area 8 miles long
and 3 miles wide, located on the northern end of the mesa. This property was
located in the middle of the winter range used by mule deer, elk, moose, and
pronghorn antelope, some of which migrate to the mesa area from as far away as
the Grand Teton National Park 170 miles to the
north.Migration studies conducted between 1998 and 2001reveled that
the pronghorn antelope herds make one of the longest annual migration among
North American big game animals.the area around pinedale is laced with
migration corridors used by thousand of mule deer and pronghorn every fall as
they make their way south to their way south to their winter grounds on the
mesa and the Green River Basin. Traffic on highway 191 which cuts across some
of the migration corridors sometimes has to be stopped to let bunched-up
pronghorn herds pass.5 Environmentalists feared that if the animals were
prevented from reaching their winter ranges or if the winter ranges became
inhospitable, the large herds would wither and die off.
Unfortunately,
drilling operations create a great deal of noise and require the constant
movement of many truck and other large machines, all of which can severely
impact animals during the winter when they are already physically stressed and
vulnerable due to their low calorie intake. Some studies had suggested that
even the mere presence of humans disturbed the animals and led them to avoid an
area. Consequently, the BLM required Questar to cease all drilling operations
on the mesa each winter from November 15 to May 1. in fact, to protect the
animals the led them to avoid an area. Consequently , the BLM required Questar
to cease all drilling operation on the mesa each winter from November 15 to May
1. In fact, to protect the animals the BLM prohibited all persons, whether on
foot or on automobile, from venturing into the area during winter. The BLM,
however, made an exception for Questar truck and personnel who had to continue
to haul off liquid wastes from wells that had already been drilled and that
continued to operate during the winter (the winter moratorium prohibited only
drilling operations, and completed wells were allowed to continue to pump gas
throughout the year).
Being forced to
stop drilling operations during the winter months was extremely frustrating and
costly to Questar. Drilling crew had to be laid off at the beginning of winter,
and new crews had to be hired and retrained every spring. Every fall the
company had to pack up several tons of equipment, drilling rigs, and trucks and
move them down from the mesa. Because of seasonal interruption in its drilling
schedule, the full development of its oil fields was projected to take 18
years, much longer than it wanted. In 2004, Questar submitted a proposal to the
Bureau of Land Management. Questar proposed to invest in a new kind of drilling
rig that allowed up to 16wells to be dug from a single pad, instead of the
traditional 1or2. the new technology (called directional drilling) aimed the
drill underground at a slanted angel away from the pad-like the outstretched
tentacles on an octopus-multiple distant locations could be tapped by several
wells branching out from a single pad. This minimized the land occupied by the
wells: while traditional drilling required 16 separate 2-4 acre pads to support
16 wells, the new “directional drilling” technology allowed a single pad to
hold 16 wells. The technology also reduced the number of required road ways and
distribution pipes since a single access road and pipe could now service the
same number of wells that traditionally required 16 different road and 16
different pipes. Questar also proposed that instead of carrying liquid wastes
away from operating wells on noisy tanker trucks, the company would build a
second pipe system that would pump liquid wastes away automatically. These
innovations, Questar pointed out, would substantially reduce any harmful impact
that drilling and pumping had on the wildlife inhabiting the mesa. Using the
new technology for the 400 additional wells the company planned to drill would
require 61 pads instead of 150, and the pads would occupy 533 acres instead of
1,474.
The
new directional drilling technology added about $500,000 to the cost of each
well and required investing in several new drilling rigs. The added cost for
the 400 additional wells Questar noted, however, that “the company anticipates
that it can justify the extra cost if it can drill and complete all the wells
on a pad in one continuous operation” that continued through the winter.6 if
the company was allowed to drill continuously through the winter, it would be
able to finish drilling all its wells in 9 years instead of 18, thereby almost
doubling the company’s revenues from the project over those 9 years. This
acceleration in its revenues, coupled with other saving resulting from putting
16 wells on each pad, would enable it to justify the added costs of directional
drilling. In short, the company would invest in the new technology that reduced
the impact on wildlife, but only if it was allowed to drill on the mesa during
the winter months.
Although
environmentalists welcomed the company’s willingness to invest in directional
drilling, the y strongly opposed allowing the company to operate on the mesa
during the winter when mule deer and antelope were there foraging for food and
struggling to survive. The Upper Green River Valley Coalition of environmental
group, issued a statement that read: “The company should be lauded for using
directional drilling, but technological improvement should not come at the
sacrifice of important safeguards for Wyomings’s wildlife heritage.” To allow
the company to test the feasibility of directional drilling and to study its
effects on wintering deer herds, the Bureau of Land Management allowed Questar
to drill wells at a single pad through the winter of 2002-2003 and again
through the winter of 2003-2004. the 5-year study would continue until 2007,
and Questar hoped to be permitted limited drilling on the mesa during winter
until then. In a preliminary report on the study, the Bureau of Land Management
said there was “no conclusive data to indicate quantifiable, adverse effects to
deer” from the drilling. The Upper Green River Vslley Coslition, however, sued
the bureau for failing to adhere to its own rules when it allowed Questar and
other companies to drill on mule deer range on the mesa during winter and for
failing to conduct an analysis of the potential impact before granting the
permits, as required by the National Environmental Policy Act. As of this
writing, the suit has not been resolved.
![]() |
Explain, in light of their theories, what Locke, Smith, Ricardo, and Marx would probably say about the events in this case. |
Question
1. What are the
systemic, corporate, and individual issues raised in this case?
2. How should
wildlife species like grouse or deer be valued, and how should that value
be
balanced against the economic
interests of the of company like Questar?
3. In light of
the U.S. economy’s dependence on oil, and in light of the environmental impact
of
Questar drilling operation, is Questar morally
obligated to cease its drilling operation on the
Pinedale Mesa? Explain
5. What, if anything, should Questar be
doing differently?
6. In your view, have the environmental
interest groups identified in the case behaved
ethically? `
Case – 4 Becton Dickinson and
Needle Sticks
During the
1990s, the AIDS epidemic posed peculiarly acute dilemmas for health workers.
After routinely removing an intravenous system, drawing blood, or delivering an
injection to an AIDS patient, nurses could easily stick themselves with the
needle they were using. “Rarely a day goes by in any large hospital where a
needle stick incident is not reported. “ In fact, needlestick injuries
accounted for about 80 percent of reported occupational exposure to the AIDS
virus among health care workers.2 It was conservatively
estimated in 1991 that about 64 health care workers were infected with the AIDS
virus each year as a result of needlestick injuries.3
AIDS was not the
only risk posed by needlestick injuries. Hepatitis C, and other lethal diseases
were also being contracted through accidental needlesticks. In 1990, the Center
for Disease Control (CDC) estimated that at least 12,000 health care workers
were annually exposed to blood contaminated with the hepatitis B virus, and of
these 250 died as a consequence.4 Because the hepatitis C virus
had been identified only in 1988, estimates for infection rates of health care
workers were still guesswork but were estimated by some observers to be around
9,600 per year. In addition to AIDS hepatitis B, and hepatitis C, needlestick
injuries can also transmit numerous viral, bacterial, fungal, and parasitic
infection, as well as toxic drugs or other agents that are delivered through a
syringe and needle. The cost of all such injuries was estimated at $400 million
to $1 billion a year.5
Several agencies
stepped in to set guidelines for nurses, including the Occupational Safety and
Health Administration (OSHA). On December 6, 1991, OSHA required hospitals and
other employers of health workers to (a) make sharps containers (safe needle
containers) available to workers, (b) prohibit the practice of recapping needle
by holding the cap in one hand inserting the needle with the other, and (c)
provide information and training on needlestick prevention and training on
needlestick prevention to employees.6
The
usefulness of these guidelines was disputed.7 Nurses worked in
high-stress emergency situations requiring quick action, and they were often
pressed for time both because of the large number of patients they cared for
and the highly variable needs and demands of these patients. In such workplace
environments, it was difficult to adhere to the guidelines recommended by the
agencies. For example, a high-risk source of needlesticks is the technique of
replacing the cap on a needle (after it has been used) by holding the cap in
one hand and inserting the needle into the cap with the other hand. OSHA
guidelines warned against this tow-handed technique of recapping and
recommended instead that the cap be placed on a surface and the nurse use a
one-handed “spearing” technique to replace the cap. However, nurses were often
pressed for time and, knowing that carrying an exposed contaminated needle is
extremely dangerous, yet seeing no ready surface on which to place the needle
cap, they would recap the needle using the two-handed technique.
Several
analysts suggested that the nurse’s work environment made it unlikely that
needlesticks would be prevented through mere guidelines. Dr. Janine Jaegger, an
expert on needlestick injuries, argued that “trying to teach health care
workers to use a hazardous device safely is the equivalent of trying to teach
someone how to drive a defective automobile safely…. Until now the focus has
been on the health care worker, with finger wagging at mistakes, rather than
focusing on the hazardous product design…. We need a whole new array of devices
in which safety is an integral part of the design.”8 The
Department of Labor and Department of Health and Human Services in a joint
advisory agreed that “engineering controls should be used as the primary method
to reduce worker exposure to harmful substances.”9
The
risk of contracting life-threatening diseases by the use of needles and
syringes in health care setting had been well documented since the early 1980s.
articles in medical journals in 1980 and 1981, for example, reported on the
“problem” of “needle stick and puncture wounds” among health care workers.10 Several
articles in 1983 reported on the growing risk of injuries hospital workers were
sustaining from needles and sharp objects.11 Articles in 1984 and 1985 were
sounding higher-pitched alarms on the growing number of
hepatitis Band AIDS cases resulting from needlesticks.
About
70 percent of all the needles and syringes used by U.S. health care workers
were manufactured by Becton Dickinson. Despite the emerging crisis, Becton
Dickinson decided not to change the design of its needles and syringes during
the early 1980s. To offer a new design would not only require
major engineering, retooling, and marketing investments but would mean offering
a new product that would compete with its flagship product, the standard
syringe. According to Robert Stathopulos, who was an engineer at Becton
Dickinson from 1972 to 1986, the company wanted “to minimize the capital
outlay” on any new device.12 During most of the 1980s,
therefore, Becton Dickinson opted to do no more than include in each box of
needles syringes an insert warning of the danger of needlesticks and of the
dangers of two-handed recapping.
On
December 23, 1986, the U.S. Patent office issued patent number 4,631,057 to
Norma Sampson, a nurse, and Charles B. Mitchell, an engineer, for a syringe
with a tube surrounding the body of the syringe that could be pulled
down to cover and protect the needle on the syringe. It was Sampson and Mitchell’s
assessment that their invention was the most effective, easily usable, and
easily manufactured device capable of protecting users from needlesticks,
particularly in “emergency periods or other time of high stress”13 Unlike
other syringe designs, theirs was shaped and sized like a standard syringe so
nurses already familiar with standard syringe designs would have little
difficulty adapting to it.
The
year after Sampson and Mitchell patented their syringe, Becton Dickinson
purchased from them an exclusive license to manufacture it. A few months later,
Becton Dickinson began filed tests of earl models of the syringe using a 3-cc
model. Nurses and hospital personnel were enthusiastic when show the product.
However they warned that if the company priced the product too high, hospital,
with pressures on their budgets rising, could not buy the safety. With concerns
about AIDS rising, the company decided to market the product.
In
1988, with the filed test completed, Becton Dickinson had to decide which
syringe would be market with the protective sleeves. Sleeves could be put on
all of the major syringe sizes, including 1-cc, 3-cc, 5-cc, and 10-cc syringes.
However, the company decided to market only a 3-cc version of the protective
sleeve. The 3-cc syringes accounted for about half of all syringes used,
although the larger size-5-cc and 10-cc syringes-were preferred by nurses when
drawing blood.
This
3-cc syringe was marketed in 1988 under the trademarked name Safety-Lok Syringe
and sold to hospitals and doctors’ offices for between 50 and 75 cent, a price
that Becton Dickinson characterized as a “premium” price. By 1991, the company
had dropped the price to 26 cents a unit. At the time, a regular syringe
without any protective device was priced at 8 cents a unit and cost 4 cents to
make. Information about the cost of manufacturing the new safety syringe was
proprietary, but an educated estimate would put the costs of manufacturing each
Safety-Lok syringe in 1991 at 13 to 20 cents. 14
The
difference between the price of a standard syringe and the “premium” price of
the safety syringe was an obstacle for hospital buyers. To switch to the new
safety syringe would increase the hospital’s costs for 3-cc syringes by a factor
of 3to 7. An equally important impediment to adoption was the fact that the
syringe was available in only one 3-cc size, and so, as one study suggested, it
had “limited applications.”15 Hospitals are reluctant to adopt,
and adapt to, a product that is not available for the whole range of
applications the hospital must confront. In particular, hospitals often needed
the larger 5-cc and 10-cc sizes to draw blood, and Becton Dickinson had not
made these available with a sleeve.
In
1992, a nurse, Maryann Rockwood (her name is disguised to protect her privacy),
was working in a San Diego, California, clinic that served AIDS patients. That
day she used a Becton Dickinson standard 5-cc syringe and needle to draw blood
from a patient known to be infected with AIDS. After drawing the blood, she
transferred the AIDS-contaminated blood to a sterile test tube called a
Vacutainer tub by sticking the through the rubber stopper of the test tube,
which she was holding with her other hand. She accidently pricked her finger
with the contaminated needle. A short time later, she was diagnosed as HIV
positive.
Maryann
Rockwood sued Becton Dickinson, alleging that, because it alone had an
exclusive right to Sampson and Mitchell’s patented design, the company had a
duty to provide the safety syringe in all size and that by withholding other
size from the market it had contributed to her injury. Another contributing
factor, she claimed, was the premium price Becton Dickinson had put on its
product, which prevented employers like hers from purchasing even those size
that Becton Dickinson did make. Becton Dickinson quietly settled this and
several other, similar cases out of court for undisclosed sums.
By
1992, OSHA had finally required that hospitals and clinics give their workers
free hepatitis B vaccines and provide safe needle disposal boxes, protective
clothing, gloves, and masks. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) also was
considering requiring that employers phase in the use of safety needles to
prevent needlesticks, such as the new self-sheathing syringes that Becton
Dickinson was now providing. If the FDA or OSHA required safety syringes and
needles, however, this would hurt the U.S. market for Becton Dickinson’s
standard syringes and needles, forcing in to invest heavily in new
manufacturing equipment and a new technology. Becton Dickinson, therefore, sent
its marketing director, Gary Cohen, and two other top executives to Washington,
D.C., to convey privately to government officials that the company strongly
opposed a safety needle requirement and that the matter should be left to “the
market.” The FDA subsequently decided not to require hospitals to buy safety
needles.16
The
following year, a major competitor of Becton Dickinson announced that it was
planning to market a safety syringe based on a new patent that was remarkably
like Becton Dickinson’s. Unlike Becton Dickinson, however, the competitor
indicated that it would market its safety device in all sizes and that it would
be priced well below what Becton Dickinson had been charging. Shortly after the
announcement, Becton Dickinson declared that it, too, had decided to provide
its Safety-Lok syringe in the full range of common syringe sizes. Becton
Dickinson now proclaimed itself the “leader” in the safety syringe market.
However,
in 1994, the most trusted evaluator of medical devices, a nonprofit group named
ECIR, issued a report stating that after testing it had determined that
although Becton Dickinson’s safety-Lok syringe was safe that Becton Dickinson’s
own standard syringe, nevertheless the safety-Lok “offers poor needlesticks
protection.” The following year this low evaluation of the safety –Lok syringe
was reinforced by the U.S. veteran’s Administration, which ranked the Safety –
Lok Syringe below the safety products of other manufacturers.
The
technology for safety needles took a giant step forward in 1998 when
Retractable
Technologies,
Inc., unveiled a
new safety syringe that rendered needlesticks a virtual impossibility. The new
safety, invented by Thomas Shaw, a passionate engineer and founder of
Retractable Technologies, featured a syringe with a needle attached to an
internal spring that automatically pulled the needle into the barrel of the
syringe after it was used. When the plunger of the syringe was pushed all the
way in, the needle snapped back into the syringe faster then the eye could see.
Called the vanishpoint syringe, the new safety syringe required only one hand
to operate and was acclaimed by nursing groups and doctors. Unfortunately, it
was difficult for Retractable to sell its new automatic syringe because of a
new phenomenon that hand emerged in the medical industry.
During
the 1990s, hospitals and clinics had attempted to cut costs by reorganizing
themselves around a few large distributors called Group Purchasing
Organizations or GPOs. A GPO is an agent that negotiates prices for medical
supplies on behalf of its member hospitals. Hospitals became members of the GPO
by agreeing to buy 85 percent to 95 percent of their medical supplies from the
manufacturers designated by the GPO, and their pooled buying power then enabled
the GPO to negotiate lower prices for them. The two largest GPOs were Premier,
a GPO with 1,700 member hospitals, and Novation, a GPO with 650 member
hospitals. GPOs were accused, however, of being prey to “conflicts of interest”
because they were paid not by the hospitals for whom they worked, but by the
manufacturers with whom they negotiated prices (the GPO received from each
manufacturer a negotiated percentage of the total purchases its member
companies made from that manufacturer). Critics claimed that manufacturers of
medical products in effect were paying off GPOs to get access to the GPO member
hospitals. In fact, critics alleged, GPOs such as Premier and Novation no
longer tried to bring their member hospitals the best medical products nor the
lowest-priced products. Instead, critics alleged, GPOs chose manufacturers for
their members based on how much a manufacturer was willing to pay the GPO. The
more money (the higher percentage of sales) a manufacturer gave the GPO, the
more willing the GPO was to put that manufacturer on the list of manufacturers
from which its member hospitals had to buy their medical supplies. 17
When
Retractable tried to sell its new syringe, which was recognized as the best
safety syringe on the market and as the only safety syringe capable of completely
eliminating all needlesticks in a nursing environment, it found itself blocked
from doing so. In 1996, Becton Dickinson had gotten Premier GPO to sign an
exclusive, 7 ½-year, $1.8 billion deal that required Premier’s member hospitals
to buy at least 90 percent of their syringes and needles from Becton Dickinson.
Around the same time, Becton Dickinson had signed a similar deal with Novation
that required its member hospitals to buy at least 95 percent of their syringes
and needles from Becton Dickinson. Because hospitals were now locked into
buying their syringes and needles from Becton Dickinson, or suffer substantial
financial penalties, they turned away Retractable’s salespeople, even when
their own nursing recommended Retractable’s safety product better as and more
cost-effective than Becton Dickinson’s.
Although
Retractable’s safety syringe was almost double the cost of Becton Dickinson’s,
hospitals that adopted Retractable’s syringe would save money over the long run
because they would not have to pay any of the substantial costs associated with
having their workers suffer frequent needlesticks and needlestick infections.
The Center for Disease Control (CDC) estimated that each needlestick in which
the worker was not infected by any disease cost a hospital as much as $2,000
for testing, treatment, counseling, medical costs, and lost wages, plus
unmeasurable emotional trauma, anxiety, and abstention from sexual intercourse
for up to a year. Those needlesticks in which the victim was infected by HIV,
hepatitis B or C, or some other, potentially lethal infection, cost a hospital
between $500,000 to more than $1 million and cost the victim anxiety, sickness
from drug therapy, and, potentially, life itself. Retractable’s syringe
completely eliminated all of these costs. Because all of the other syringes
then on the market, including Becton Dickinson’s Safety-Lok, still allowed some
needlesticks to occur, they could not completely eliminate all the costs
associated with needlesticks and so were not as cost-effective. (A CDC study
found that Becton Dickinson’s Safety-Lok, when tested by hospital health
workers in three cities from 1993 to 1995, had cut needle-stick injuries only
from 4 per 100,000 injections down to 3.1 per 100,000 injections, a reduction
of only 23 percent, the worst performance of all the safety devices tested.) An
econometric study commissioned by Retractable proved that its safety syringe
was the most cost effective syringe on the
market.
In
October 1999, ECRI, the nation’s most respected laboratory for testing medical
products, rated Becton Dickinson’s Safety-Lok syringe “unacceptable” as a
safety syringe, saying it might actually cause an increase in needlesticks
because it required two hands to use it and one hand might accidentally touch
the needle. It simultaneously gave Retractable’s Vanishpoint syringe its
highest rating as a safety syringe, the only safety syringe to achieve this
highest level. Becton Dickinson objected strenuously to the low rating of its
own syringe, and in 2001, the testing lab raised the rating for the safety-Lok
a notch to “not recommended.” Retractable’s Vanishpoint syringe, however,
continued to receive the highest rating. In spite of being recognized as the
best and most cost-effective technology for protecting health care workers from
being infacted through needlesticks, Retractable still found itself blocked out
of the market by the long-term deals that Becton Dickinson had negotiated with
the major GPOs.18
In1999,
California became the first state to require its hospitals to provide safety
syringes to its workers. Then, in November 2000, the Needlestick safety and
Prevention Act was signed into low. The act required the use of safety syringes
in hospitals and doctor’s offices. In 2001, OSHA incorporated the provisions of
the Needlestick Safety and Prevention Act, finally requiring hospitals and
employers to use safety syringes and significantly expanding the market for
safety syringes, a development that is expected to bring lower prices. None of
this legislation required a specific type or brand of syringe and Becton
Dickinson’s safety devices were stocked by most GPO member hospitals.
Continuing
to find itself locked out of the market by Becton Dickinson’s contracts with
Premier and Novation, Retractable sued Premier, Novation and Becton Dickinson
in federal court alleging that they violated antitrust laws and harmed
consumers and numerous health care workers by using the GPO system to
monopolize the safety needle market.19 In 2003, Premier and
Novation settled with Retractable out of court, agreeing to henceforth allow
its member hospitals to purchase Retractable’s safety syringes when they
wanted. In 2004, Becton Dickinson also settled out of court, agreeing to pay
Retractable $ 100 million in compensation for the damage Becton Dickinson
inflicted on Retractable. During the 6 years that Becton Dickinson’s contracts
prevented Retractable and other manufacturers from selling their safety needles
to hospitals and clinics, thousands of health workers continued to be infected
by needlesticks each year.
Questions
1. In your judgment, did Becton Dickinson
have an obligation to provide the safety syringe in all its sizes in 1991?
Explain your position, using the materials from this chapter and the principles
of utilitarianism, rights, justice, and caring.
2. Should manufacturers be held liable for
failing to market all the products for which they hold exclusive patents when
someone’s injury would have been avoided if they had marketed those products?
Explain your answer.
3. In your judgment, who was morally
responsible for Maryann Rockwood’s accidental needlestick: Maryann Rockwood?
The clinic that employed her? The government agencies that merely issued
guidelines? Becton Dickinson?
4. Evaluate the ethics of Becton Dickinson’s
use of the GPO system in the late 1990s. Are the GPO’s monopolies? Are they
ethical? Explain.
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