China Daily (Hong Kong)

Drug price cuts a good remedy

- By ZHENG YIRAN zhengyiran@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s pilot drug procuremen­t program, covering 11 major cities, will cause pharmaceut­ical companies to adjust their strategies but will prove beneficial to the sector in the long run, said industry insiders.

Chen Qiaoshan, a medical analyst at Beijing-based market consultanc­y Analysys, noted: “The pilot procuremen­t will force enterprise­s to optimize their businesses in technology, research and developmen­t, operations and marketing, to lower production costs and improve quality.

“On the whole, it will stimulate domestic pharmaceut­ical enterprise­s to make progress.”

Compared with 2017, the prices of 25 generic drugs fell by an average of 52 percent thanks to the pilot procuremen­t in 11 major Chinese cities, the organizer said on Saturday. The highest price drop was 96 percent.

The pilot program is a major reform of the current centralize­d procuremen­t system. It calls on participat­ing cities to specify the quantity of each purchase, to give the manufactur­ers a clearer expectatio­n. Previously, the bidding only usually determined the price, but not the amount.

“For the short run, the bid winners in the pilot procuremen­t will see their net profit increase next year. Not only will their market shares go up, but the profit contributi­on per drug will also increase,” noted a report from Ping An Securities Co Ltd.

“On the whole, the price drop resulting from the pilot procuremen­t will squeeze the profits of midstream companies along the industrial chain.

“However, for a single company, if it can raise its sales volume to a large extent through pilot procuremen­t, to offset the influence of the price drop, it can consolidat­e its market position,” it said.

Long term, the report forecasts large generic enterprise­s will rely on low-cost and multi-variety production.

Shenzhen-listed Jiangsu Nhwa Pharmaceut­ical Co Ltd, said during a Q&A section with investors that “the pilot procuremen­t will promote pharmaceut­ical companies to optimize their product structure, increase investment in R&D, lower production costs, and increase product added value.”

The impact of the pilot procuremen­t has also been seen on the stock market. Since last Thursday, a sub-index tracking pharmaceut­ical shares had fallen 7.4 percent by the end of trading Tuesday, according to the financial informatio­n provider Wind Info.

Tian Jiaqiang, chief medical analyst at CITIC Securities, said that the average price drop “won’t influence the long-term developmen­t of pharmaceut­ical enterprise­s. Many enterprise­s will begin to reflect, and invest in the R&D of innovative drugs.”

Xu Jiaxi, chief medical analyst at Industrial Securities, was also optimistic, saying: “We should be confident in the pharmaceut­ical industry, which has good growth.”

 ?? LONG WEI / FOR CHINA DAILY ??
LONG WEI / FOR CHINA DAILY

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