People’s Democracy
|
Vol. XXV
No. 13
April 01, 2001 |
Decontrol of Drug Prices
Amit Sen Gupta
THE wolves are baying at the door, once
again calling for further decontrol in the prices of drugs. Since comprehensive price
controls were imposed on drugs in 1979, drug companies have continuously clamoured for
their removal. It is a measure of the clout that these companies exercise, that over the
years they have regularly managed to extract their pound of flesh from the government.
Thus successive price control orders of the government have whittled down both the span of
price control and the limits on profitability.
Thus, in 1979, a total of 343
drugsaccounting for 85 per cent of drugs in the marketwere placed under price
control. Profitability allowed on price controlled drugs ranged from 40 per cent to 75 per
cent. In 1987 the number of controlled drugs were reduced to 166 — covering 60 per cent
of drugs in the market, and profitability allowed was increased to a range of 75-100 per
cent.
In 1995 the number was further reduced
to 74 — covering 35 per cent of the market, and profitability allowed was hiked up to 15
per cent. At each point when price control has been reduced, there has been an immediate
spiralling effect on the prices of drugs. And each time this has been preceded by loud
wails from the Pharma industry about declining profitabilitya claim however that has
never been borne out by the health of the balance sheets of the pharma sector.
This time around, the tone for further
price decontrol was set a couple of years back by the then Finance Secretary Sri Vijay
Kelkar, who publicly held forth on the need to free the industry of all price controls.
The recent announcement by Sri Yashwant
Sinha in his Budget speech of further price decontrol of drugs, hence, was on expected
lines. It is expected that only a handful of drugs will now remain under price control,
and this is bound to fuel rise in drug prices. This time, though, the plea of poor
profitability for drug companies has not been used. Possibly because, given that all major
news channels these days discuss share prices at great lengths, it would have been
difficult to conceal the fact that Pharma shares have remained the most profitable even
when there have been dizzy gyrations in the stock market.
Instead the rationale now being used to
justify price control is two prongedone that market forces are best suited to
stabilise drug prices, and two that the industry must be made more profitable in order for
it to increase investment on R&D and be globally competitive. Both these arguments are
seriously flawed, and are being used to justify the unjustifiable. Let us examine both
these arguments.
DRUG PRICE CONTROL IS A GLOBAL
PHENOMENON
It is important to underline that drug
prices are controlled by differing mechanisms all over the world, including in developed
capitalist countries. In Australia since 1993, new drugs with no advantage over
existing products are offered at the same price. Where clinical trials show superiority,
incremental cost effectiveness is assessed to determine whether a product represents value
for money at the price sought. In Britain, there exists the pharmaceutical price
regulation scheme – a voluntary agreement between Britains Department of Health and
the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry in which companies negotiate profit
rates from sales of drugs to the National Health Scheme.
Globally, Drug Companies are being
forced to reduce the cost of medicines. Pressure is being mounted by Health Insurance Cos,
Health Management Organisations (HMOs) and governments (in countries like UK and Canada
where the State provides Health Insurance cover) all over Europe and North America. These
pressures have become stronger in recent years with the realisation that spiralling Drug
costs are making Health insurance cover (whether state funded or privately managed)
unsustainable. In all these countries there is a major move to insist on generic
prescription in most cases, thus opening up a huge generics market. Large TNCs are forced
to compete on more or less equal terms which a large number of lesser known Cos, and also
sell drugs at relatively cheaper rates. In the US, for example, from 1995 through 1997,
generic (i.e. drugs without brand names that are produced by small companies and are
cheaper) drug prices showed a double-digit rate of decrease. This shift was facilitated by
the Hatch-Waxman Act, which made the approval process of generic drugs much easier. Since
1984 this has resulted in a dramatic increase in competition from generic drugs, leading
to an estimated saving of 8-10 billion dollars in 1994 alone.
The fact that drug prices are controlled
all over the world flows from the global experience that market mechanisms cannot be
expected to stabilise prices. Various other interventions are needed to manipulate the
market, in order to guard against monopolies emerging. Unlike in the case of consumer
goods, there is no direct relation between the market and consumers in the case of drugs.
Drugs are purchased by consumers on the advice of doctors or chemists.
Consequently, the marketing strategies
of drug companies target doctors or chemists. Doctors are not known to take decisions
based on price of contending brands. Similarly chemists have no interest in selling
cheaper brands. So, if we believe that drug prices will be kept low by market competition,
it is a belief that is not borne out by the past experience, in India or elsewhere.
Here, it is necessary to nail another
lie. There is a prevailing myth that drug prices in India are the lowest in the world.
This is at best a partial truth. Drugs, which are still Patent Protected, are much cheaper
in India due to Indias earlier Patent Act. It should be obvious that we will lose
this advantage after amendment of the Indian Patent Act of 1970. But off-Patent Drugs
(which anyway account for 80-85 per cent of current sales in the country) are not
necessarily cheaper in India. In fact, generally, Drug prices for these Drugs are higher
in India than those in Sri Lanka and Bangladesh. In fact prices of some top selling drugs
are higher in India than those in Canada and the UK. Thus, clearly, the benefits of the
advantage that the Indian Drug Industry enjoys over all other Third World nations, in
terms of the availability of indigenous technology and a large domestic market, have not
been passed on to the consumers.
FALSE PROMISE OF GREATER R&D
ACTIVITY
Let us now turn to the argument that
price decontrol is necessary to spur R&D activities in the drug industry. When
legitimate concerns were raised that amendment of the Indian Patents Act would result in
rise in Drug Prices, the Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilisers had consistently claimed
that any rise in prices would be kept in check through mechanisms in the Drug Price
Control Order. It is extremely surprising that now that amendments are being made in the
Indian Patents Act, we should be simultaneously talking of diluting Price Controls. Any
further dilution would mean virtual abandonment of Price Controls. If the government is to
consider this, under the garb of encouraging R&D, it will only substantiate earlier
fears that a change in the Patents Act can only lead to a spiralling rise in prices of
drugs.
Present investments on R&D
in the Drug Industry is less than 2 per cent of sales. The dubious logic that price
controls have led to this situation has been put forward. In the past two decades the span
of price controls has come down from in excess of 85 per cent of the Industrys
turnover to around 35 per cent. If reduction in price controls is to spur R&D
activity, why has there been no rise in R&D expenditure in the past decade. It may be
recalled that the 1995 policy had a provision for keeping all drugs developed by
indigenous R&D outside price controls for ten years. This too does not seem to have
spurred any significant R&D activity in the Industry. The issue of Price Controls has
nothing to do with infrastructure development for R&D, and the two issues need to be
dealt separately. It appears as though the issue of R&D has been used as a “red
herring” by drug companies to lobby for price decontrol and thereby licence to
profiteer.
A major constraint for the Drug Industry
in India is the relatively small domestic market (compared to our population). The
solution to this constraint cannot be sought within the industry, as it has to do with the
extremely low purchasing power of over 80 per cent of our population. The belief that it
is possible to extract significantly larger amounts of “surplus” as profits from
the domestic industry, that can be channelled for R&D, is thus fallacious.
WHY DO WE NEED A DRUG INDUSTRY?
Finally, we need to understand that
drugs are a commodity that are required most crucially by those who are least likely to be
able to pay for them. Unlike commodities like cars or washing machines, the whole logic
for the existence of the Industry lies in its ability to provide its products to the
people who are economically deprived. If the Industry fails in this fundamental endeavour,
the very reason for its existence is open to question. We already have a situation
where a majority of our population does not have access to drugs, because they cannot
afford to pay for them. In such a situation rise in drug prices can only “cost
out” larger sections of the population. It can then legitimately be asked, if
those who require drugs the most are going to be unable to afford drugs, why have a drug
industry at all? The industry argues that adequate competition, even in the absence of
price controls, can peg down drug prices. If that is so, why are they afraid of price
controls?