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Industrial Policy, Globalization and India

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Title: Industrial Policy, Globalization and India


1
Industrial Policy, Globalization and Indias
Pharmaceutical Industry
  • Sudip Chaudhuri
  • Indian Institute of Management Calcutta
  • Conference on 'Post Liberalisation Constraints on
    Macroeconomic Policies', organised by IDEAS and
    UNDP, Muttukadu, Chennai, 27-29 January, 2006

2
Indias Industrial policy success in
pharmaceuticals is well known
  • Product patents in drugs abolished in 1972
  • Remarkable growth of pharmaceutical industry
    since then
  • India and Japan only two countries where western
    MNCs do not dominate
  • India net exporter and self sufficient in drugs
  • Drug prices among the lowest in the world
  • Source of good quality cheap drugs for the rest
    of the world.

3
Status of Indias Pharmaceutical Industry
  • Size of Indias pharmaceutical market is 4.9
    billion (2003). This constitutes about 1 of the
    global pharmaceutical sales and about 10 of
    total generic market in the world.
  • In value terms, India is the 14th largest market
    in the world. In volume terms, Indias share is
    around 8 and is the 4th largest after USA, Japan
    and China
  • India is among the top five bulk drugs
    manufacturers of the world. India has the largest
    number of US FDA approved manufacturing
    facilities outside USA.
  • India exported drugs worth 3.2 billion to more
    than 65 countries. India is the 14th largest
    exporter of drugs in the world

4
To Comply with TRIPS, India has amended Patents
Act, 1970
  • Patents (Amendment) Act, 1999
  • Patents (Amendment) Act, 2002
  • Patents (Amendment) Act, 2005

5
The Patents (Amendment) Act, 2005
  • Has introduced product patent protection for
    pharmaceuticals from 1 January, 2005
  • Hence unless otherwise authorized, Indian generic
    companies cannot produce new drugs developed
    abroad

6
It is widely believed that the Global product
patenting of medicines will
  • Enhance the monopoly power of the MNCs and
  • Result in higher prices and lesser access of
    medicines

7
But those in favour of TRIPS argue
  • Countries such as India with developed generic
    companies can gain economically

8
How are Indian generic companies responding
and what are the economic implications?
9
Options for Indian companies in post 2005
  • Develop new drugs
  • Collaborate with MNCs as manufacturing and/or
    marketing partners for the new drugs developed by
    the MNCs
  • Produce off-patent drugs
  • In the domestic market
  • For exports

10
We concentrate here on
  • Generic exports

11
It is often argued that
  • Product patent protection will not have any
    negative consequences.
  • In fact it will have some beneficial effects

12
Remarkable growth of pharmaceutical exports is
the result of the confidence built up in our
industry due to our progressive adherence to our
IP commitments.Some 60 billion dollars worth
of drugs are going off patent in the next few
years. Indian industry can grab a lions share of
this provided we are a bona fide member of the
international trading community. (Press
Statement by the Minister on December 27, 2004)
13
Growth of Indias pharmaceutical exports
  • Not the result of progressive adherence to our
    IP commitments
  • As the chart shows, it was only after the
    abolition of product patent protection in 1972
    that the export market developed

14
Growth of Exports
Source Sudip Chaudhuri, The WTO and Indias
Pharmaceuticals Industry Patent Protection TRIPS
and Developing Countries, New Delhi, Oxford
University Press, 2005.
15
Patents Act, 1970
  • Provided the Indian companies the opportunities
    to gain the necessary experience and
    earn/mobilize resources to enter and grow in the
    export markets

16
India developed as the home country for us and
provided the financial base and skill sets to
expand internationally.
  • (Letter of the CEO Managing Director Of Ranbaxy
    to Shareholders in Annual Report, 2001, p. 10).

17
Growth sequence
  • Production for the domestic market
  • Exports to un-regulated markets
  • Exports to regulated markets other than USA
  • Exports to USA
  • Motivation at each stage larger market and
    higher price realizations

18
Acceleration of pharmaceutical exports since
mid-1990s
  • Not the result of TRIPS but a response to it
  • Anticipating shrinkage in opportunities of
    reverse engineering of new drugs for production
    in domestic market in the post-TRIPS regime
  • Larger Indian companies have been aggressively
    focusing on generic exports since the mid-1990s,
    particularly to regulated markets such as USA

19
Export Intensity of selected Indian companies,
2002-03
Company Exports as of total sales
Ranbaxy 65.6
Dr Reddys 60.1
Cipla 39.4
Aurobindo 50.6
Orchid 82.5
Lupin 39.0
Ipca 60.0
Shasun 69.9
20
Indian Generic Companies
  • Are also increasingly targeting the export
    markets for patent expired drugs particularly in
    developed countries.

21
In Developed Countries
  • Even when patents for the new chemical entity in
    the drugs expire
  • Secondary patents prevent delay generic entry

22
Types of Patents
  • New Chemical Entities (NCEs)
  • New formulations, i.e., new dosage forms or
    routes of administration
  • New combinations of existing NCEs
  • New salts or esters of existing NCEs, i.e., new
    chemical derivatives of existing NCEs
  • New uses of existing NCEs
  • New processes of manufacturing

23
The Case of Omeprazole
  • AstraZeneca obtained the patent for the
    anti-ulcer drug, omeprazole, the active
    ingredient in Prilosec on April 5, 1979.
  • (In India Omez (Dr Reddys price Rs 25/- for 10
    tablets 10 mg, i.e., less than a . In USA, the
    price has been several times more)
  • Patent supposed to expire in 1999
  • Two formulations patents of AstraZeneca, which
    were filed in 1987, i.e., 8 years after the
    patent on the active ingredient was taken and
    hence expires later (in 2007).
  • The formulations patents relate to the coating of
    the pill, which prevents drug from being degraded
    by stomach acids.
  • Dr Reddys was prevented from entering into USA
    even after 1999 because the MNC argued that Dr
    Reddy vilated its formulation patent on the
    coating (another generic company proved that its
    formulation patent is independent and hence got
    the approval to enter.

24
Indian generic cos actually contributing to
affordability in USA
  • A number of Indian companies are involved in
    patent challenges to hasten entry of generics
  • Tremendous competition among Indian companies

25
Indian generic companies
  • Are increasingly fighting patent cases on these
    secondary patents
  • Resulting in earlier generic entry
  • And hence contributing to affordability of drugs
    in developed countries

26
Patent challenges in USA by Indian cos
  • Fluoxetine (Dr Reddys against Eli Lilly)
  • Cefuroxamine axetil (Ranbaxy against GSK)
  • Amoldipine maleate (Dr Reddys against Pfizer)
  • Loratidine (Morepan/Geneva against Schering
    plough)

27
Competition among Indian bulk drugs exporters to
USA, 30/9/2003
No of Indian cos with DMFs Bulk drugs
10 Cefuroxamine
9 Ranitidine
8 Fluconazole
6 Ciprofloxacin, Metformin etc
5 Ibuprofen, Clarithromycin etc
4 Trimethoprim, Omeprazole etc
3 Cephalexin, Famotidine etc
28
60 billion off-patent market is exaggerated
  • As generics enter, prices fall sharply. Assuming
    realistically that the prices would fall by about
    90 per cent, a 60 billion market effectively
    becomes 6 billion
  • Bulk drugs account for about 15 per cent of the
    price. Hence the total bulk drugs market, where
    primarily the Indian exporters are involved would
    be around 0.9 billion during the five year
    period, or 0.18 billion per year. (Indias
    current exports about 3 billion).
  • Then there is competition among the Indian
    exporters and also from other countries such as
    Italy, Switzerland, Taiwan province of China,
    Brazil, Argentina and particularly China.
  • Hence the beneficiaries would actually be the
    consumers in USA and other developed countries

29
Another factor
  • Remarkable export growth of the larger Indian
    companies in recent years has been accompanied by
    equally remarkable domestic growth
  • The top 15 Indian companies, for example have
    been growing at about 20 per annum in the
    domestic market in recent years

30
Annual compound rate of growth of domestic retail
sales, 1996-2004 ()
  • Cipla 18.7
  • Ranbaxy 16.6
  • Nicholas Piramal 26.1
  • Sun Pharma 32.2
  • Dr Reddy's 31.6
  • Zydus-Cadila 18.1
  • Aristo Pharma 20.2
  • Alkem Labs 21.9
  • Lupin 13.3
  • Source ORG-MARG

31
Under TRIPS
  • When Indian companies are prevented from
    producing the new drugs, their domestic growth
    will be adversely affected
  • A steady and stable home market is of fundamental
    importance for success abroad
  • It will be very difficult for Indian companies to
    sustain the export dynamism in the absence of a
    growing domestic market.

32
Thus
  • Domestic space of operations is important
  • In a product patent regime, this can be provided
    by an easy to use compulsory licensing system
  • In such a licensing system, not only will the
    growth of the generic companies be faster both in
    the domestic and export markets
  • Competition will drive down the prices of new
    drugs and make these more accessible

33
But Has India Used the Flexibility Under
TRIPS to Introduce a Proper Compulsory Licensing
Regime?
34
Article 31 of the TRIPS agreement dealing with CL
  • Does not place any restriction on the grounds
    under which a CL can be given.
  • In case there were any doubt, the Doha
    Declaration has made it clear that
  • Each member has the right to grant compulsory
    licence and the freedom to determine the grounds
    upon which such licences are granted.

35
Conditions listed in Article 31
  • that authorization of such use will have to be
    considered on its individual merits
  • that before permitting such use (except in such
    cases as situations of national emergencies,
    extreme urgency, public non-commercial use), the
    proposed user will have to make efforts over a
    reasonable period of time to get a voluntary
    licence on reasonable commercial terms
  • that the legal validity of the CL decision and
    the remuneration will be subject to judicial or
    other independent review

36
Not difficult to tackle these problems
  • the grounds and the procedure can be so specified
    as to make these conditions less onerous than
    what these appear to be
  • Guidelines can be issued for reasonable terms
  • The maximum time period can also be stipulated
  • The review can be a simple administrative process

37
Amended Patents Act has elaborate provisions on CL
  • General provisions
  • Also special provisions on notification by the
    central government

38
The Amended Act provides details of
  • General principles applicable to working of
    patented inventions
  • Grounds for grant of CL
  • Matters to be taken into account by the
    Controller of patents while considering
    applications for CL
  • The procedure for dealing with CL applications
  • General purposes for granting CL
  • Terms and conditions of CL.

39
The text of General principles includes
excerpts from
  • Article 7 of TRIPS on Objectives
  • Article 8 of TRIPS on Principles and
  • Para 4 of the Doha Declaration

40
General principles
  • that patents are granted to encourage inventions
    and to secure that the invention are worked in
    India ..
  • that they are not granted merely to enable
    patentees to enjoy a monopoly for the importation
    of the patented article
  • that the protection and enforcement of patent
    contribute to the promotion of technological
    innovation and to the transfer and dissemination
    of technology, to the mutual advantage of
    producers and users of technological knowledge
    and in a manner conducive to social and economic
    welfare, and to a balance of rights and
    obligations
  • that patents granted do not impede protection of
    public health and nutrition and should act as an
    instrument to promote public interest specially
    in sectors of vital importance for socio-economic
    and technological development of India
  • That the patents granted do not in any way
    prohibit the Central Government in taking
    measures to protect public health

41
But
  • These have not been operationalised to have a
    simple and easy to administer CL system
  • Article 1 of TRIPS - member countries are not
    obliged to implement in their laws more extensive
    protection than is required by this Agreement
    ....
  • But the government has preferred to adopt a
    stricter CL regime than what is required under
    TRIPS.

42
Difficulties
  • the procedure specified is cumbrous. The
    procedure is open-ended without any time limit
    imposed for the grant of CL
  • the copy of the CL application will have to be
    advertised in the official gazette, though this
    is not required under TRIPS
  • the patentee or any other person may oppose the
    application and will have to be given adequate
    time for doing so
  • the Controller will decide only after giving both
    the parties an opportunity to be heard.
  • A CL granted by the Controller can be opposed.
    Such appeals will be considered by an Appellate
    Board before a CL is ultimately permitted.

43
Difficulties
  • the grounds of reasonable requirements of the
    public or reasonably affordable price can
    easily be challenged by the patentees.
  • then arguments and counter-arguments will follow.
    After all these are heard by the Controller and
    then by the Appellate Board, in case of an
    appeal, it may be years before a CL is granted,
    if at all.
  • The entire process is excessively legalistic and
    provides the patentees the opportunity to
    manipulate by litigation. The huge expenses
    involved in fighting the large pharmaceutical
    companies holding the patents may dissuade the
    non-patentees from applying for licences in the
    first place.

44
Not mere theoretical possibilities
  • The current CL procedure has been inherited from
    the British Act of 1911
  • Till 1972 when the Act of 1911 was in force,
    there were only five CL cases
  • Granted in only two cases
  • Refused in two cases
  • Ultimately, application withdrawn in one case

45
Special CL provisions
  • Any time after the sealing of the patent, an
    application for a CL can also be made under
    Section 92 for a patent notified by the Central
    Government.
  • Such a notification can be made in circumstances
    of national emergency, extreme urgency, or public
    non-commercial use
  • The procedure mentioned need not be followed if
    the emergency, or extreme urgency or public
    non-commercial use is due to public health crises
    related to AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria or other
    epidemics.

46
Section 92 is a potentially important
provision.But no simple and easy to use
procedure has been elaborated in the Rules
47
A National CL Policy
  • Rather than adopting a case by case approach, the
    Central Government may notify the list of
    medicines eligible for CL in public health crises
  • The inclusion of any drug in the list cannot be a
    ground for opposition and appeal. Guidelines may
    be issued for the royalty to be paid to the
    patent holders in case of CL.
  • For any drug in the public health list, the
    Controller may immediately after receiving an
    application, grant the CL, fixing a royalty rate
    using the royalty guidelines

48
  • Any opposition or appeal against the grant of a
    CL in this case can only relate to the royalty
    rate fixed.
  • The opposition to the rate fixed should not hold
    up the use of CL. While this is being
    adjudicated, the non-patentee could begin to use
    the patent on the basis of an undertaking that
    the royalty rate finally decided will be paid in
    full
  • The case by case consideration of the royalty
    rates payable and the opportunity to oppose and
    appeal against the royalty rate fixed will
    satisfy the Article 31 clauses (a), (i) and (j)
    relating to consideration of individual merits
    and review of the CL decision.
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