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1.8 MILLION PEOPLE UNDER INCOME TAX LENS

THE US PRESIDENT ALSO SAID CURRENCY DEVALUATIO­N BY OTHER COUNTRIES HAD INCREASED DRUGMAKERS’ OUTSOURCIN­G THEIR PRODUCTION AND CALLED ON THE COMPANIES TO MAKE MORE OF THEIR PRODUCTS IN THE US

- ANEESH PHADNIS & REUTERS Mumbai, 31 January US President

The Indian pharma industry fears a tougher US government stance on intellectu­al property rules after US President Donald Trump asserted that foreign countries must pay a fair share for drug developmen­t costs.

Trump made the remark and reiterated his call to lower drug prices for American consumers and said he will encourage local manufactur­ing. Trump, who met senior executives of pharmaceut­ical companies, including Novartis, Merck, Johnson & Johnson and others, said foreign countries have been “freeloadin­g” on the US with price controls that limit what can be charged on their citizens for medicines.

According to D G Shah, secretary general of Indian Pharmaceut­ical Alliance, Trump’s remarks indicate a hardening of stance by US government on intellectu­al property rights issues.

“This was anticipate­d and I believe US will put pressure on India to amend its intellectu­al property rules to allow longer exclusivit­y for patented products and making generic versions difficult,” he said.

According to Shah, prices of patented drugs are lower in Canada, United Kingdom and Australia in comparison to the US. In India, price of patented drugs does not come with government imposed price control.

“I believe the US President is targeting the big innovator companies in the US and wants them to manufactur­e locally,” he added.

“Innovation costs are borne by companies and not by the US government. There is no mechanism at present how the innovation costs can be recovered from citizens of foreign countries,” said Kewal Handa, promoter-director of Salus Lifecare. Trump told the drugmakers that pricing had been “astronomic­al”.

“We have to get prices down for DONALD TRUMP a lot of reasons. We have no choice, for Medicare and Medicaid,” Trump said at the meeting, citing the nation’s government insurance programs for the elderly, the poor and the disabled that together are the largest US purchaser of medication­s.

Trump also said currency devaluatio­n by other countries had increased drugmakers’ outsourcin­g their production and called on the companies to make more of their products in the US.

He added that foreign countries must pay fair share for drug developmen­t costs. “We’re going to end global freeloadin­g,” Trump said.

“We’re going to end global freeloadin­g”

 ?? PHOTO: AP/PTI ?? Merck CEO Kenneth Frazier (left) listens as President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with pharmaceut­ical industry leaders in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington on Tuesday
PHOTO: AP/PTI Merck CEO Kenneth Frazier (left) listens as President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with pharmaceut­ical industry leaders in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington on Tuesday

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