

 Unrestricted entry of foreign equity into the Indian pharmaceuticals  sector is being questioned on three grounds, one serious and two  non-serious. The least serious of the three comes from the National  Security Council, which has proposed that the sector be put on the  “sensitive” list, requiring prior scrutiny by the Foreign Investment  Promotion Board. This is difficult to understand as there is no  intellectual property to guard against foreign takeover, the Indian  industry being entirely generic. The second non-serious reason, given by  the department of pharmaceuticals,  is that Indian firms are not on a level playing field — they do not  have deep pockets to do the kind of R&D necessary for survival in a  free-for-all which global firms do. But the key example cited in favour  of this argumentis the takeover of Ranbaxy by Japanese firm Daiichi  Sankyo, which happened not because Ranbaxy ran out of money to carry  forward the vision of Parvinder Singh, but because his heirs wanted to  cash out.
Unrestricted entry of foreign equity into the Indian pharmaceuticals  sector is being questioned on three grounds, one serious and two  non-serious. The least serious of the three comes from the National  Security Council, which has proposed that the sector be put on the  “sensitive” list, requiring prior scrutiny by the Foreign Investment  Promotion Board. This is difficult to understand as there is no  intellectual property to guard against foreign takeover, the Indian  industry being entirely generic. The second non-serious reason, given by  the department of pharmaceuticals,  is that Indian firms are not on a level playing field — they do not  have deep pockets to do the kind of R&D necessary for survival in a  free-for-all which global firms do. But the key example cited in favour  of this argumentis the takeover of Ranbaxy by Japanese firm Daiichi  Sankyo, which happened not because Ranbaxy ran out of money to carry  forward the vision of Parvinder Singh, but because his heirs wanted to  cash out. The department is on firmer ground when it fears that a growing tide  of foreign takeovers can impact the pricing and availability of  medicines in India. It is in India’s national interest to ensure that  essential medicines are available...........
The department is on firmer ground when it fears that a growing tide  of foreign takeovers can impact the pricing and availability of  medicines in India. It is in India’s national interest to ensure that  essential medicines are available...........Of the two devices used in the past to keep medicine prices low, a  favourable patent regime and price control, the latter has worked up to a  point. Any price control system has its limitations and in the past,  populist ministers have sought to unduly extend the list of medicines  under price control even as pharma companies have tried to dodge by  tweaking formulations. A better way for the government to access good  medicines cheaply can be through negotiated bulk purchase for  distribution through the public health-care system. This way it can ask  for precisely what it wants and talk only to the firms that follow good  manufacturing practices. This route can become important over time as  the government raises its expenditure on health care, which it must.  Also, as incomes rise rapidly, private health-care expenditure is likely  to rise even faster. Therefore, the market for affordable drugs is  likely to grow long and fast. Foreign firms which play by these rules  and get in are likely to reap early-bird advantages.
Source: Business Standard. 
 
 

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