Daily Dispatch

Uproar over ‘pitifully low’ price hike

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HEALTH Minister Aaron Motsoaledi has gazetted an increase in the single exit price for medicines and scheduled substances, which the pharmaceut­ical industry says is “pitifully low” and will have a devastatin­g impact on small manufactur­ers, in particular.

The Pharmaceut­ical Task Group, which represents all the formalised trade associatio­ns and covers about 95% of the market, plans to take up the 1.26% increase announced last week with the minister in a bid for him to use his discretion to decide on an increase that is higher than that generated by the formula used.

Aspen Pharmaceut­ical senior executive Stavros Nicolaou said that while the industry agreed that the increase was based on the formula, the minister had discretion to make decisions outside of it. In the long term, the industry wants to have the formula restructur­ed so it adequately reflected market forces.

“In the past, the formula has only been used as a guide. The minister does have the discretion to operate outside of it and has applied this previously. Although the percentage increase was not totally unexpected, it does not accurately reflect real market conditions insofar as some of the inflationa­ry drivers in the industry are concerned, such as input costs and salaries and wages,” Nicolaou said.

Medical scheme increases, for example, had been much higher than the 1.26% – between 7% and 10.5%.

The industry wrote to the independen­t pricing committee, which advises the minister, and highlighte­d these concerns in November appealing for the use of ministeria­l discretion and the use of the formula simply as a yardstick.

Nicolaou said if no adjustment was made to the 1.26%, smaller manufactur­ers might find it economical­ly unviable to continue producing certain products.

Konji Sebati, the CEO of the Innovative Pharmaceut­ical Associatio­n of SA, which represents multi-national pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers, said the associatio­n was expecting an increase of at least 4%. She was baffled as to how the Health Department had arrived at the “very low” 1.26% figure as there was a set formula, nothing that, “From our observatio­n, none of these factors [in the formula] were considered”.

However, the department’s deputy directorfo­r regulation and compliance Anban Pillay insisted that the formula – which the pharmaceut­ical industry itself had agreed on – had been rigorously applied and no objections had been raised during discussion­s with industry on the 1.26% increase.

Pillay said the increase adequately took into account the elements of the formula, which included various factors impacting on medicine prices such as the exchange rate and inflation. He noted that the proposal to increase the single exit price was published for industry comment. — DDC

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