The Commodification of Human Traits: Market Dynamics in the Genomic Economy

This article has 0 evaluations Published on
Read the full article Related papers
This article on Sciety

Abstract

This article theorizes the emergence of a genomic marketplace in which traits—from disease resistance to enhanced cognition—are priced, licensed, and traded as proprietary assets. We introduce two mechanisms that organize value capture in this economy: inherited revenue assurance (IRA), a lineage-binding royalty structure for germline edits, and genomic asset–backed securities (GABS), financial instruments that securitize expected royalty cashflows from edited populations. We build a conceptual model of the trait value chain—from IP origination through multigenerational licensing and secondary finance—and analyze distributional and ethical consequences under competing regulatory regimes (patent exclusivity, FRAND-style licensing, royalty caps, and trait commons). The contribution is a political–economy account that connects molecular IP to household welfare and macro–finance, while offering policy tests that distinguish emancipatory from extractive designs.

Related articles

Related articles are currently not available for this article.