Business Today

DRUG WARS

India is importing less pharmaceut­ical raw materials from China, but the Chinese challenge is far from over.

- By JOE C. MATHEW

ON January 29, 2016, the Narendra Modi government decided to withdraw the customs duty exemption on import of 73 bulk drugs. It was a tough call as import of these low-cost key active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s (APIs), or raw materials – almost entirely from China – was helping Indian formulatio­n companies, or entities that make syrups, tablets, injections, etc, remain competitiv­e. An increase in medicine prices due to rise in input costs would have been unpopular as imports included raw materials used to make life-saving medicines for critical illnesses such as cancer and HIV/AIDS.

But the government bit the bullet because of a bigger threat. The import of low-cost bulk drugs from China, which touched almost $2 billion in 2014/15, was severely impacting domestic bulk drug production. India had become too dependent on raw materials from China for making several life-saving drugs and there were apprehensi­ons that any abrupt end to this flow could trigger a public

health crisis, as the domestic industry didn’t have the capacity to fill the gap. The fact that bulk drug and other key drug intermedia­te imports from China touched a record $2.14 billion in 2015/16, justified the fear.

Two years later, the government has a reason to rejoice, as the value of drug imports from China dropped one-third to $1.41 billion in 2016/17. The escalation in retail prices has not been steep. And there are signs of revival of bulk drug manufactur­ing hubs in states such as Gujarat and Telangana.

Has this been possible because of the withdrawal of the customs duty exemption? And, is there a visible change in the drug industry’s dependence on China? It is too early to say.

The Dependence

The value of drug raw material imports from China might have come down, but its share in volume terms is still significan­t. Global healthcare informatio­n provider IMS Health, in a recent report, which was commis-

sioned by the Department of Commerce in coordinati­on with the Indian embassy in Beijing, said 90 per cent fermentati­on-based products such as 6-Aminopenic­illanic acid (6-APA) and its predecesso­r, Penicillin-G (Pen-G), the key ingredient­s in semi-synthetic penicillin­s (SSPs) in India, are imported from China. The report says that to make a difference, India needs to ramp up the manufactur­ing of bulk drugs and intermedia­tes of commonly prescribed Vitamin C and antibiotic­s like Metronidaz­ole, Ofloxacin and Livofloxac­in to offset the high (60-70 per cent) dependence on Chinese raw materials. The report also says that China accounts for 51 per cent of India’s medicine raw material imports by value and 80 per cent by volume, an indication of its heavy dependence on China for manufactur­ing highvolume/mature products.

Have Indian companies lost the ability to make such high-volume products? Not really. It seems the reason for such high imports is more economical than technical. “India manufactur­es most of the bulk drugs that are imported from China,” says Niranjan Singh, a Vadodara-based consultant, who helps Chinese pharmaceut­ical companies get their products registered in India. Singh, who has over 80 Chinese clients and has been instrument­al in registrati­on of about 150 products in India in the last decade or so, says India’s bulk drug requiremen­t can be categorise­d into three segments. “One, getting APIs (bulk drugs) from China to make formulatio­ns to sell in the US and other regulated markets. Two, import of raw materials to make products to sell in India. And three, using these to make products for the rest of the world. While there is minimal use of Chinese raw materials in products made for the tightly-regulated markets (US, Europe, Australia, etc.), in other segments, it is very big,” he says.

The withdrawal of the customs duty exemption has reduced some price arbitrage importers had, but that is not the only reason India’s bulk drug industry has started seeing an opportunit­y. In China, the cost of producing bulk drugs has shot up in the last two years and pollution control measures are driving several units to close down. Some are reducing production, while others are relocating to dedicated chemical zones. Labour charges are also not low any longer. All this has made China’s products expensive.

“It is a blessing in disguise. We had a price difference of 20 per centplus. Prices have increased to a level that has given Indian manufactur­ers cushion to re-start production. In the last five-six months, bulk drug capacity addition in states such as Gujarat has been rising,” says P.V. Appaji, former director general of Pharmaceut­ical Export Promotion Council.

China accounts for 51% of India’s medicine raw material imports by value and 80% by volume, an indication of its heavy dependence on China for manufactur­ing high volume/ mature products

Action Plan

Just before the government decided to withdraw the customs duty exemption, it declared 2015 as the year of API and asked a committee headed by V.M. Katoch, the then secretary, Ministry of Health, to suggest a long-term strategy for boosting bulk drug production.

None of the suggestion­s has been accepted. “The recommenda­tions are pending. Unless a Budget allocation is made (to promote the industry), nothing is going to move,” says B.R. Sikri, Vice President, Bulk Drug Manufactur­ers of India.

Sikri is worried that the conditions created by external factors may not sustain the industry’s growth unless the government decides to ride the momentum and improve infrastruc­ture. “The Katoch Committee has recommende­d the creation of large pharmaceut­ical clusters to gain from economies of scale like China does. It talks about providing common infra- structure such as utilities and effluents treatment facilities on a par with the best in the world through government funding. It has even suggested that the government set up plants for critical APIs and intermedia­tes that cannot be supplied by private players due to commercial non-viability,” says Sikri.

The industry wish list includes flexible and simple environmen­tal laws and policies, faster approvals and anti-dumping duty on products that are in abundance in India. Should the government take the Katoch Committee recommenda­tions seriously? Or is there no reason to worry as it is the end of China’s low-cost production story?

Niranjan Singh believes that the lull is temporary and the next Chinese onslaught is not going to be in the form of low-cost raw materials. “Since 2007, China has been concentrat­ing on improving its formulatio­n manufactur­ing capabiliti­es. It is slowly switching to formulatio­ns and is going to pose as a big challenge there,” he says.

Given China’s ability to create global scale capacities, the day when “Made in China” quality medicines start arriving in tablets and capsules may not be far away. It is high time the government and the domestic industry put their act together.

 ??  ?? A pharmaceut­ical plant in China; the cost of producing bulk drugs has shot up there in the last two years
A pharmaceut­ical plant in China; the cost of producing bulk drugs has shot up there in the last two years
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 ?? Source: Rajya Sabha ?? PHARMA ACCOUNTS FOR A BIG CHUNK OF IMPORTS FROM CHINA...
Source: Rajya Sabha PHARMA ACCOUNTS FOR A BIG CHUNK OF IMPORTS FROM CHINA...

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