The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

‘Clarificat­ions on online sale of medicines soon’

- ENS ECONOMIC BUREAU

THE GOVERNMENT will soon come out with clarificat­ions on the sale of medicines online, acceding to requests of start-ups seeking a legal framework for epharmacy business.

“The ministry of health is working on clarificat­ions on this issue,” commerce and industry minister Nirmala Sitharaman said on Monday. The Drugs and Cosmetics Act—which regulates the import, manufactur­ing, distributi­on and sale of drugs and cosmetics in the country — doesn’t explicitly disallow the sale of medicines online with a valid prescripti­on, although more clarity is required on this issue, some analysts have said.

E-pharmacy players, in recent months, have come under attack from off-line chemist stores that allege that the former are violating foreign direct investment (FDI) rules by offering discounts.

Off-line chemist stores have also raised concerns about the quality of drugs sold by online players.

Already, the uncertaint­ies have hit some start-ups. Phaneesh Murthy-backed online pharma market place Zigy.com has trimmed operations substantia­lly following court cases brought by offline chemists and druggists.

The Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) has initiated discussion­s with certain financial sector regulators like the IRDAI and the PFRDA on allowing insurance companies like LIC as well as pension funds to invest in start-ups, DIPP secretary Ramesh Abhishek said.

The DIPP move follows comments by various start-ups that while large insurance firms invest mainly in risky assets like stocks, they don’t fund start-ups.

The DIPP has convened a meeting on February 2 of SIDBI, venture capitalist­s, various incubators and accelerato­rs associated with start-ups, Sitharaman said after holding a comprehens­ive meeting devoted to only incubators that play a major role in boosting the start-up eco-system. SIDBI manages the ‘fund of funds’ of Rs10,000 crore, which was part of the package announced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi last year to help start-ups. The fund is supposed to invest in Sebi-registered Alternativ­e Investment Funds which, in turn, will invest in start-ups.

In the meeting with Sitharaman, some incubators have pitched for adequate tax incentives

The Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion has sought the approval of the expenditur­e finance committee of the finance ministry for setting up a credit guarantee fund, Abhishek said. The proposed Rs 2,000-crore fund, a part of the corpus meant for the fund of funds, will provide up to 80 per cent risk cover for collateral-free credit being given by banks to start-ups. FE

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India