In the middle of a lot of good policies, such as tax cuts, deregulation, curbing California’s stranglehold that forces its zany extremist regulatory hell on the rest of America and demanding that European countries pay their share for their defense, some really bad policy ideas have also come forth. The latter will certainly undermine the benefits the good ideas otherwise would produce.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick has floated trial balloons — one for the government to collect a share of university inventions’ patent royalties, another for a patent tax of 1% to 5% of a patent’s value. Both ideas should be deep-sixed. Either or both will damage the U.S. innovation ecosystem and cost us far more than the secretary acknowledges.
Busting Bayh-Dole’s Successful Model
Taxpayers already benefit from federally funded research, thanks to the Bayh-Dole Act. This law ensures that taxpayer-supported discoveries reach the marketplace — they didn’t before Bayh-Dole. That generates more than a trillion dollars in economic activity, millions of jobs and thousands of new companies while delivering to Americans life-changing products. And all those translate into tax revenue for the government and an expanding economy.
Congress deliberately omitted government revenue-sharing from the 1980 Bayh-Dole Act because it would discourage licensing and slow commercialization. Lawmakers understood that the public gets the greatest returns in many forms when private industry has confidence to develop and invest in turning university basic research into practical applications. They proved to be absolutely right.
Universities don’t reap unrestricted profits from patent licensing. They must cover the costs of securing and managing patents, share royalties with inventors, and reinvest the remainder into future research. Not only does this cycle fuel breakthroughs in consumer products, it also yields essential medicines and technologies that benefit American consumers for generations. Redirecting a slice of that revenue to Washington would break this cycle, undermine property rights and diminish investment in early-stage technologies. As the Bayh-Dole Coalition notes, “Altering this model would deter future breakthroughs, jeopardize America’s leadership in science and technology, and undermine our national security.”
A Tax on Innovation
Assessing a tax on the supposed value of a patent is nothing less than a tax on American innovation. This unwise proposal courts extremely great risk from complexity, disincentivizing investors and entrepreneurs in patent-centric technologies, and handing competitive advantage to our foreign competitors.
The most knowledgeable experts, such as Grover Norquist of Americans for Tax Reform and economist Steve Moore of Unleash Prosperity (see item 2), have assessed this proposal and found it wanting. For instance, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, along with allied cosignatories, explains: “This unprecedented idea, if implemented, would undermine the foundations of America’s intellectual property (IP) system, diminish our global competitiveness, and put millions of innovation-driven jobs at risk. Moreover, this approach conflicts with the administration’s laudable goal of reshoring manufacturing to the United States, a goal which depends on a strong and reliable IP framework to attract investment and foster domestic innovation.” IPWatchdog founder Gene Quinn’s bottom line is, “Charging patent owners a percentage of the overall value of a patent is catastrophically stupid.”
Nearly 40 center-right organizations, including the leading tax reform groups, wrote Sec. Lutnick opposing his patent tax scheme, explaining how it's bad tax policy and is at odds with and counterproductive to the One Big Beautiful Bill. Notably, this coalition said the tax would “undermine the benefits of hard-fought business tax provisions of the OBBBA for America’s most innovative and competitive companies – including the Foreign-Derived Intangible Income provision that encourages companies to develop and locate intellectual property (IP) in the United States. This tax on valuable patents would simultaneously drive private venture capital away from U.S. R&D innovators while making our competitors in overseas markets more attractive as investment opportunities.”
Now is not the time to undercut the innovation system that’s delivered so much value to American taxpayers, workers and consumers. However, that’s exactly what the proposed university patent royalty share, the tax on patent valuation or both will do. Grownups in the administration must reject this proposal. Rather than gush money to line Uncle Sam’s pockets, these tax leeches will stall innovation, jeopardize America's security and open the door for foreign rivals to surpass us in science and technology.
The United States must protect the framework that keeps us at the forefront of global innovation and progress. Official rent seeking is still rent seeking, which disincentivizes enterprise while shrinking the rewards of pursuing innovation and commercialization. Or as Steve Moore put it, “Someone needs to remind Secretary Lutnick that when you tax something you get less of it.”


