Irrational formulation

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| But by paying almost ritual obeisance to two hobby horses""price control and debranding of dominant products""it has raised the hackles of the pharma industry and laid the ground for a lot of acrimony and lobbying. The latter will suit a politician like Ram Vilas Paswan (he is the minister in charge) but will bring no benefit to India's poor. The Indian pharma industry carries a lot of clout: drugs found to be dangerous and banned in regulated markets keep selling in India freely. |
| So it is necessary that the industry's energies are directed along channels which will promote better health as well as help the industry survive and even prosper. |
| To keep things in focus, it is necessary to remember certain basics. Indian drug prices remain among the lowest in the world, though they have gone up quite a bit since the early nineties. Low prices are a great legacy from the licence control era and as much of it as is practicable should be retained. |
| This helps the industry too. It would have never become globally competitive had Indira Gandhi not done away with product patents, encouraged indigenisation and enforced price controls. |
| At the same time, Indians also end up consuming a horrendous amount of spurious and substandard drugs, drugs procured by state governments from "local" small- scale units are sometimes sub-standard, and large-scale corruption in many states prevents most of the free medicine from reaching the poor. |
| It is a cruel irony that Indian pharma companies are global suppliers of low-cost anti-retrovirals that are bringing new hope to HIV-AIDS victims but India has not the system or the inclination to make available the same drugs to its own afflicted poor. |
| At present, the Indian pharma industry is marked by intense price competition and pressure on margins. The Indian public machinery simply does not have the competence to manage a price control-cum-procurement system which will bring down drug prices even further, particularly when there is a need to stay away from substandard drugs. One of the sensible recommendations of the report is that procurement should only be from pre-qualified manufacturers, they should comply with good manufacturing practices and help should be given to small-scale units to enable them to become schedule M-compliant (follow good manufacturing practices). |
| Significantly, no limit appears to have been specified for becoming schedule M-compliant. The recommended debranding of drugs which have over 70 per cent market share will also not affect poor people. A company's name itself is a brand. Ranbaxy, for example, has been popularising the 'R' in the US where it is a generics player. |
| The report speaks about educating the public. If debranding eventually takes place then educated people may well take to insisting that the chemist supplies them the generic product of a well known company. Controversy over branding and price control is likely to divert attention from sensible suggestions like reducing excise duty on pharma products from 16 per cent to 8 per cent, setting up a settlement commission to speedily resolve overcharging claims and completely exempting HIV-AIDS and cancer drugs from every kind of state levy. What a pity! |
First Published: Sep 23 2005 | 12:00 AM IST