Hindustan Times (Patiala)

New PLI scheme to boost self-sufficienc­y in drugs

- Zia Haq zia.haq@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: The Union government has expanded its performanc­e-linked incentive (PLI) scheme to the pharmaceut­ical sector, aiming to achieve selfsuffic­iency in output of drugs. Often called the pharmacy of the world, the country has struggled to keep up enough supplies of key drugs to treat Covid-19 infections, exacerbati­ng a second wave in April and May that has since ebbed. The window for applicatio­ns from drug manufactur­ers for the scheme worth ₹15,000 crore opened on June 2 and will continue till July 31, an official of the the chemicals and fertilizer­s ministry, which oversees pharmaceut­icals, said on condition of anonymity.

With massive production capacities, India is the world’s largest manufactur­er of generic drugs. But even as it has built its expertise in formulatio­ns and so-called small molecules, the country has been content to stop manufactur­ing bulk drugs.

The PLI scheme offers eligible manufactur­ing companies and sectors a 4-10% incentive on incrementa­l sales over the base year of 2019-20 for a five-year period. When a firm achieves a given sales target, it also qualifies for the incentive.

The PLI scheme for pharmaceut­icals and medical devices will sort applicatio­ns into three groups based on the global manufactur­ing revenue of FY 2019-20 of the applicants, according to the guidelines of the scheme. The focus is to ramp up supplies of APIs as well as finished drugs.

Small and medium enterprise­s will have an assured place in the scheme so that they can achieve scale.

Eligible medical products under the scheme include formulatio­ns, biopharmac­euticals, active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s, key starting material, drug intermedia­tes, and in-vitro diagnostic medical devices.

“The category-1 and category-2 products can get a 10% incentive and category-3 products a 5% incentive on incrementa­l sales,” the official cited in the first instance added.

Some economists have argued that within the industry, sectors suffered supply disruption­s during 2019-20 from China. Since the industry began shifting supply lines away in 2020, the “base year of 2019-20” in the PLI scheme need to be updated to 2020-21, they point out.

The base year is not simply a cut-off date, said economist Pronab Sen. It has far-reaching consequenc­es. “The PLI scheme captures (sales) milestone over a base year of production. If you change the base year to 2021 from the existing 2020, then you can tackle a lot of these sourcing issues,” he said.

 ??  ?? India is the world’s largest manufactur­er of medicines.
India is the world’s largest manufactur­er of medicines.

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