Showing posts with label regulation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label regulation. Show all posts

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Globalising Pharma?

My article on the aftermath of India recognising product patents in pharma industry - published in Wealth Insight last month

Consumers should prepare for a price hike as foreign ownership increases & competition decreases

The recent elections in the US could almost have been about a single issue - the cost of healthcare. In his first term, President Barack Obama made some radical changes in the US health care system - amongst the largest and costliest in the world. He brought in a policy (popularly called “Obamacare”) which made it possible for a large number of previously uninsured Americans to get some basic health care at a relatively affordable price. It can be argued that this was one of the key reasons for his re-election.

Healthcare in India – return of the multinational
The policy framework for health care in India has undergone substantive change in recent years. Before India abolished product patents in pharmaceutical products in 1972, the Indian pharma industry was small, and dominated by multinationals. Medicines were largely imported and expensive. Post 1972, domestic industry grew rapidly – to become the third largest in the world in terms of volume. India today has some of the most sophisticated manufacturing facilities (more US FDA approved facilities anywhere in the world outside the US). Foreign dominance dramatically reduced. In 2005, the Manmohan Singh government signed the TRIPS agreement – which re-introduced product patents. Since then the market share of foreign companies - which was in the early teens, has more than doubled. This has happened through a series of takeovers – Ranbaxy, Piramal, Dabur Pharma; and several marketing alliances – Orchid, Dr. Reddy’s. In addition, foreign ownership was allowed to the extent of 100 per cent. Foreign companies have increased holdings in their Indian subsidiaries – Pfizer now has a 100 per cent subsidiary in India, Novartis increased shareholding from ~51 per cent in 2005 to ~76 per cent by 2010, Aventis from 50 per cent to 60 per cent in 2010.



Foreign investment benefits?
When demanding greater market access, lobbyists are prone to offer a few arguments:
* Foreign investment allows access to new technology
* Foreign investment creates jobs
* Foreign investment increases consumer choice and affordability





These arguments were heard in recent times with respect to foreign investment in retail segment. Given that 100 per cent foreign ownership was allowed in the pharma sector almost a decade ago, it may be worthwhile to see what has transpired since. It may also be a pointer of the shape of things to come if the policy of FDI in retail were to stay.

Hoax 1: where is the investment?
Pharma is not a very capital intensive industry. Despite this, investment in manufacturing by the foreign companies decreased from 70 per cent of the investment made (1995) to less than 5 per cent of the investments made in the industry over a period of 15 years. Without investments in manufacturing, it is clear that multinational sales were largely driven by imports (see graph: Formulation trade) shows that while exports have stagnated of late (as foreign ownership increases) imports continue to grow at an annual growth rate of over 20 per cent. Without investment in physical infrastructure, it is debatable if any technology transfer would have taken place, or significant number of jobs been created.

Hoax 2: consumer choice and affordability
With Indian companies being prevented from manufacturing drugs which have been patented post 2005, foreign monopolies will increase in India. Consumer choice will be limited, not enhanced.
The impact of the 2005 policy is currently muted since many drugs where patents were granted post 2005, were already manufactured in India, and therefore continue to be produced. As time elapses, product pipelines will dry up – leaving monopoly producers to charge what they deem fit. Already, anti-cancer drugs cost up to Rs 20 lakh per person per year, while chronic diseases like rheumatoid arthritis have a single does costing between Rs 15,000 to Rs 40,000.

The impact of re-introduction of product patents, and increased foreign ownership is in fact extremely detrimental to consumers and their health – both of body and wealth!

Market Leaders are price leaders
Another defining feature of the pharma industry is that consumers do not determine the choice of medicine – it is decided by either the doctor or the chemist. In such a case, companies that have large marketing budgets, and can offer foreign trips for “educational seminars” for doctors, say, are more likely to find their products prescribed despite the existence of cheaper alternatives. Price of the most expensive brand of the same product can be higher by a factor of 50 times compared to the least expensive (see table: Price swings).




A new pricing policy
In November 2012, the union cabinet approved a new policy for pricing medicines in India. Set a time limit by the Supreme Court, the new policy has changed the basis of calculating price of drugs under price control. While earlier, drug prices were fixed on the basis of cost plus mark-up, the new policy posits average market price of a particular drug as the basis of fixing selling price. Ostensibly, this will lower prices of “essential” drugs (as defined under the ‘National list of essential medicines in India’ (NLEM)) – but will it?
As argued earlier, over the next decade or so, the number of drugs where monopoly pricing will prevail will only increase. With greater foreign ownership, dependence on imports too will go up – further reducing the ability of the government to correctly gauge the actual cost of drug production. As competition reduces, so will the effect of “averaging” the market price – in effect allow collusion among few players to hike up prices to unjustifiable levels.

Near term, expect to see the new pricing policy to reduce industry revenues by 2-3 per cent. However, even in the next couple of years, that is more than likely to be made up by galloping prices. Be prepared for higher health insurance premiums.

Did I hear someone say that the process patent regime was better after all? All “globalisation” is not a good thing necessarily.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

From "too big to fail" - to "too big, will fail"

The recent banking crisis has brought to the fore the argument against letting banks become too big. For far too long, regulators and politicians (including the erstwhile finance minister - Chidambaram) have argued for the merger of government owned banks. For some strange reason (atleast strange to me) - this is supposed to increase the ability of the banks to compete. With capital adequacy requirements unchanged, why a merger will allow greater competitiveness - especially since in the Indian context the merged banks will typically not be allowed to restructure either branches or staff - has always mystified me. At last, I see a serious academic Prof. Jayanth Varma argue for smaller banks. Hope someone is listening.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Strike by professors of IIT and IIM

The Professors of IIT and IIM are planning a hunger strike in a few days to protest the fresh pay structure awarded to them in the pay commission. One grouse is that the teachers at these "premier institutes" are now to be paid at par with those of the other UGC supported institutes (actually the differential is being reduced). The consulting income that these professors make (in part because they are professors at these institutes instead of any run-of-the-mill university) is ofcourse not part of the debate.

The irony is that the IIM chaps think that they deserve more than even the IIT profs. Given that the debate is based on the grounds that these institutes are "premier" I thought it would be worthwhile to check the kind of academic work they do. IIMA's website is quite informative when it comes to the kind of programs they offer. However, click here - on the research and publications weblink - and you will be greeted by a blank page. The research page ofcourse claims that IIM A produces a third of all the management research done in India. I wonder if they mean that they are responsible for a third of nothing !

As Ram Tzu says (refer previous post)

You stand at the edge
Ready to throw yourself in.

What a shock to discover

There is nowhere to go
And no one to throw


Go figure

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Regulating the regulators

Imagine a school with a strict teacher in every class. In one such class, are a bunch of kids playing with fire. While the teacher watches, the kids set fire to the window curtains. The fire spreads, and engulfs the school and burns down most of the infrastructure. It then spreads to the neighbourhood and affects the nearby buildings. While trying to bring the fire under control, and examining the cause of the fire, the school principle suggests that one way to prevent another such occurrence would be to appoint the errant teacher as the fire warden for the neighbourhood.

Sounds like a fantasy out of Alice in Wonderland? Welcome to the real world – this is how the financial system of the world operates cica 2009. Gordon Brown, in preparation of the G20 summit on the financial crisis, exported to the world by the USA and UK, writes
“I have learned from this financial crisis that the disciplines we expect of markets cannot be guaranteed without strengthened supervision. “
Uh? Let’s see which part of the financial system that caused the breakdown was unsupervised. The most maligned are the hedge funds. Did these loathed vehicles need a bail-out – not really – for the most part, they just quietly wound down and exited. However, we have had multi-billion (totaling trillions of dollars) of bailout for supervised entities - banks, insurance companies, and investment banks. So don’t you see, the solution to the problem must be more supervision!

Having efficiently “supervised” an excellent problem situation, the regulators in the US have now suggested a Geithner plan to fix it. The plan involves a “put” to investors of banks and distressed asset funds, while transferring the entire risk to the tax payers. As Paul Krugman writes,
"Treasury has decided that what we have is nothing but a confidence problem, which it proposes to cure by creating massive moral hazard."
Mark Twain could have been speaking about regulators when he wrote
"All you need in this life is ignorance and confidence then success is sure"
especially if success is measured by negating the principles of free markets, and forcible propping up defunct organizations.

Subscribe Now: standard