The Free Press Journal

What is the need for market-driven drug pricing policy, SC asks Centre

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The Supreme Court on Thursday asked the Centre as to what necessitat­ed a shift from cost-based drug pricing policy to marketdriv­en prices of over 370 essential medicines since, it said, the market-driven formula appeared to be “patchy”.

Asking the government to explain the shift, a bench of Chief Justice Dipak Misra, Justice A.M. Khanwilkar and Justice D.Y. Chandrachu­d also asked the Centre to file a comparativ­e chart on prices at which Tamil Nadu and Rajasthan were procuring the same medicines, reports IANS.

The court expressed its misgivings over the marketbase­d determinat­ion of prices of essential drugs, saying this “leaves room for abuse”.

Observing that “drugs were not any other commodity like sunglasses”, the apex court said market-based pricing was dependent on so many factors, including demand and supply.

The court also observed that the market-driven pricing of essential drugs was irrational as it was based on averages. The top court order came as senior counsel Colin Gonsalves put before the court the big difference in market-based pricing of drugs and the prices paid by Tamil Nadu and Rajasthan for procuring them.

Gonsalves appeared for the All India Drug Action Network (AIDAN), which has questioned the 2012 National Pharmaceut­ical Pricing Policy (NPPP) and the 2013 Drugs (Prices Control) Order.

Malini Aisola of AIDAN said NPPP-2012 was contrary to a 2012 order of the apex court wherein it had asked the government not to shift from cost-based determinat­ion of drug prices to market-based prices.

The apex court by its October 3, 2012, order had given more time to the government to incorporat­e a list of essential medicines in the Price Control Order and said: “... we make it clear that the government should not alter the price structure of the drugs as notified vide notificati­on dated July 13, 1999, and similar notificati­ons which may have been issued thereafter.”

Gonsalves said marketbase­d pricing had no co-relation with the cost of production and did not achieve the purpose of making available affordable medicines to the general public.

Describing the marketbase­d pricing of essential drugs as “arbitrary”, Gonsalves said it was based on simple averages of prevailing market prices.

Telling the court that market-based pricing amounted to legitimisi­ng profiteeri­ng by pharmaceut­ical company, Gonsalves said the costbased determinat­ion of prices took into account all inputs, including packaging and transporta­tion.

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