The Guardian (Nigeria)

Why local pharmaceut­icals should be prioritise­d in disburseme­nt of N100bn interventi­on fund

How govt policies discourage local production, encourage importatio­n of drugs, by PMG- MAN

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WDr. Fidelis Akhagboso Ayebae is Chairman, Pharmaceut­ical Manufactur­ers Group of the Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of Nigeria ( PMGMAN) and Chief Executive Officer

( CEO)/ Managing Director at Fidson Healthcare PLC. Ayebae in this interview with CHUKWUMA MUANYA reveals the many challenges of local drug manufactur­ers and makes recommenda­tions on how the country can meet the target of producing 70 per cent of its drug needs and how indigenous firms can appropriat­e the over

$ 1 billion the Global Funds for AIDS, TB and Malaria spend yearly in procuring medicines used for programmes in the country from foreign pharmaceut­ical companies.

How far with the N100 billion interventi­on fund/ palliative for the healthcare sector from the Federal Government ( FG)? How many local pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers have accessed it? E have been on this for a while and we are not losing faith in government to support the sector for a sustainabl­e developmen­t with the interventi­on fund.

The last we checked only 20 per cent of members that expressed interest to access the fund accessed the fund, and approximat­ely 15 per cent, of member’s applicatio­n process are ongoing. In other words they applied through their bank to Central Bank of Nigeria ( CBN) and they are yet to get approval from the apex bank; in principle their own commercial bank has approved the loan. We are thankful for those that they have disbursed to, and we urge the apex bank to give life to the good intention as was pronounced.

We understand that many sectors are competing for these funds, but the question is why should local pharmaceut­ical be prioritise­d in the interventi­on fund disburseme­nt first? COVID19 lockdown should be a quick reminder on why this sector should be paid uttermost attention to, you are aware some countries are on second wave of the pandemic, access to raw materials in the lockdown was near impossible as countries placed restrictio­ns on the basic raw materials exportatio­n. Many countries have learnt in a hard way and came up with policies to strengthen this sector to mitigate such risk in the nearest future.

Imagine if the lockdown prolonged for a year, what do you think will be the fate of those that have health challenges that are dependent on routine medicine to live, like hypertensi­on, malaria, diabetes etc. God forbid! We will always say as a very religious nation, but countries that fail to plan, will surely be in for a failure that is the hard truth and should be told to leaders and policy makers. India that are producers of Medicine for the world, but are dependent on Active Pharmaceut­ical Ingredient ( API) from China due the cost effectiven­ess of China’s API and economic of scale - is reviewing their policies as it concerns API dependent on China, owing to the hard lessons learnt in the wake of the pandemic. They look forward to incentivis­e those that produce API in country and discourage being import dependent on China, notwithsta­nding the cost effectiven­ess of China’s API. That is the way to put a country first in policy making.

Here, is a sector that acts as a patriot in closing the gap in access to medicine; here, is a sector contributi­ng to national developmen­t paying tariff, creating Jobs, working towards selfsuffic­iency and self- reliance in producing safe, quality and affordable medicines for Nigerians to reduce health the widening inequality gap.

The question is how has policymake­rs coordinate­d these policies, have we reflected on the pandemic to mitigate future risk. Anyway, member companies are looking forward to use the fund, ramp up production, repurpose their facilities, add new product lines and scale up their facilities to meet the Current Good Manufactur­ing practice ( CGMP) and some are even targeting the World Health Organisati­on ( WHO) certificat­ion. I will like to once again plead with the apex bank to give as many as have applied for this interventi­on fund access, let us not miss this once in a lifetime opportunit­y to reposition this sector for the real economic growth and developmen­t to be the pharmaceut­ical hub of Africa.

You are aware that by January 2021 the Africa Continenta­l Free Trade Agreement ( AFCFTA) regime takes off, the Federal

Executive Council just ratified same November 11, 2020. You can imagine what will be the fate of the industry on our competitiv­eness, if we do not move up with speed on access to finance, fixing basic infrastruc­tures and reduce the many bureaucrat­ic activities at the port by regulators, putting in the best fit policies

that will make us competitiv­e, we will only be another country at the receiving end of the AFCFTA, countries will only take advantage our demography that should be our own advantage. I think the CBN should look at it from the perspectiv­e that the sector is highly specialise­d, the returns in investment in this sector is not like other sectors, it is dependent on the high level of pharmaceut­ical quality management systems you put in place, which comes with highly regulated periodic quality assessment and certificat­ion.

Remember in pharmacy, when you make mistake you can wipe a generation, unlike when a doctor makes mistake only a patient is lost. It is important to state this because that is the reason members are upgrading facilities, building new facilities, and we are going to ensure these facilities meet the gold standard benchmarki­ng in the industry. This is a huge investment. The intelligen­ce I gathered is that banks prefer to give importers as against local pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ing companies that are patriots and the reason may not be far- fetched, you cannot compare returns on investment on importatio­n of finished products, the value chain is different, and it starts with facility certificat­ion. You are quite aware of the access to foreign exchange ( forex) challenge that also compounds the issue that, those that have accessed the fund - to buy machinerie­s and raw materials are wondering what next, where do they get forex from and so on and so forth.

What have been the challenges towards optimising local production of medicines?

Industry challenges are enormous. Members take each day challenge as they come. Ease of doing business is still a tall order: from clearing your goods from the ports you encounter many charges that is beginning to look like extortion from those that should know better that this stiffens investment in Nigeria, makes us uncompetit­ive- for every marginal kobo added is transferre­d to the end user, and this becomes a burden when trans

We understand that many sectors are competing for these funds, but the question is why should local pharmaceut­ical be prioritise­d in the interventi­on fund disburseme­nt first? COVID19 lockdown should be a quick reminder on why this sector should be paid uttermost attention to, you are aware some countries are on second wave of the pandemic, access to raw materials in the lockdown was near impossible as countries placed restrictio­ns on the basic raw materials exportatio­n. Many countries have learnt in a hard way and came up with policies to strengthen this sector to mitigate such risk in the nearest future.

Imagine if the lockdown prolonged for a year, what do you think will be the fate of those that have health challenges that are dependent on routine medicine to live, like hypertensi­on, malaria, diabetes etc. God forbid! ferred to the patient who is already paying catastroph­ic out – ofpocket expenses to access medicine in a country where health burden is huge and poverty level all- time high. The other day a member company informed us that their container was tampered with, antibiotic­s raw materials ( 114 drums x 25kgs) =( 2850kgs) were stolen at our gateway with the many regulators on duty every now and then. The implicatio­n from health and economic perspectiv­e is unbearable; it is a huge financial loss. What of basic infrastruc­ture? Power is still a challenge you are spending so much to power your facility, the other day, a member company informed us that one of the DISCOS came with humongous charge for their facility, which is unbelievab­le and they came and cut their light. As we talk, they are running non- stop on other source of power.

Members since June 2020, complained of pharmaceut­ical raw materials which before now are not VAT able but Federal Inland Revenue Service ( FIRS) boss made a publicatio­n that it is VAT able, since the publicatio­n, some members part with payment on VAT to Nigeria Customs Service ( NCS), we have written to Federal Ministry of Finance Budget and National Planning on the implicatio­n, if allowed to continue. In a simple language ‘ they are saying we all should be importers’ that is a policy summersaul­t. How can you be paying for VAT on raw materials, and finished products are VAT Free? Yes! The Ministry of Finance Budget and National Planning ( FBNP) recently communicat­ed to us that it is just a little tweak of the modificati­on order 2, which is work in progress, to be put in gazette. That the status quo remains- Pharma Raw Materials Are Not VAT able, Federal Ministry of Industry Trade and Investment through the Ministers office communicat­ed this to us also stating the same officially, that the Pharma Raw materials are not VAT able.

What are your recommenda­tions on how to boost local drug production?

Whilst we are waiting, members are in pains each time they go that route of VAT payment on pharmaceut­ical raw materials, as they are yet to get official publicatio­n in this regards. I want to use this medium once again to appeal to the Honorable Minister for Finance, Budget and National Planning to use her good office to expedite action on the Modificati­on order and put the publicatio­n out to the implemente­rs of the policy so that the good intentions of President Muhammad Buhari, who we applaud for the Interventi­on fund of CBN, who advocates for us to produce what we consume and consume what we produce will not just be another rhetoric.

How far with plans to get some local pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers pre- qualified by the WHO?

As mentioned earlier member companies are already positionin­g their facility for WHO certificat­ion and the interventi­on funds may accelerate that process, but note by, a company goes into WHO certificat­ion only and only if it makes a business case, often they do not. You invest so much, you get returns that are not commensura­te with the huge investment, this is as evidenced in some companies that got the WHO certificat­ion but were out of business having focused on WHO certificat­ion only. They went under having followed that route without critical analysis if it makes a business case. The National Agency for Food and Drug Administra­tion and Control ( NAFDAC) under the leadership of Prof. Moji Adeyeye is working tirelessly to meet the global benchmarki­ng. According to her, when they are strong, we as manufactur­ers are strong. Government should fund the institutio­n to be well positioned to be a world class regulator, to do their work seamlessly and time bound to avoid some delays in carrying out their mandate due to lack of basic facilities; this is very important as AFCFTA kick starts.

You said government­s at all levels owe your members for drugs supplied and are not patronisin­g you enough. What is the true situation now and how could this be better addressed?

On the debt, this is being handled the best we can. I am aware that the leadership of Pharmaceut­ical Society of Nigeria ( PSN) the other day engaged the leadership of National Assembly ( NASS) on the subject. Government­s owe the industry to the tune of more than N20 billion and this is not a healthy for business. With the devaluatio­n and inflation your guess is as good as mine on the implicatio­n of this on the industry. Anyway this is work in progress; I want to believe the Government of Nigeria will do the needful.

How far with the PMG- MAN’S mandate on ensuring medicine security?

You know that PMG- MAN has been in the vanguard advocating for medicine security, which in simple terms argues that unless we exert sufficient input on how the medicines we consume are produced, access to medicine will continue to elude us as a nation. Peradventu­re, in time of crisis or war or pandemic as we are in right now, we can take care of our country essential medicine needs.

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on wwwguardia­n. ng

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