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Generic drug deflation

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August 13, 2017

What is the issue?

  • Amid the public fury over the escalating costs of brand-name medications, the prices of generic drugs have been falling.
  • This has raised concerns with the profitability of major generic manufacturers.
  • It has also led to serious question as to whether it will benefit the end consumer in the long run or not.

What are generic drugs?

  • A brand-name drug product is originally discovered and developed by a pharmaceutical company.
  • It costs a lot for the innovator to bring a new drug to the market.
  • So a patent allows the innovator to sell the branded drug exclusively in order to recoup the money spent during development and to generate a profit.
  • Generics are off-patent, less-expensive drugs that are chemically similar to an innovative drug.
  • There is a considerable decline in generic drug prices in recent days.

What are the reasons for this trend?

  • Generic drugs are mimic versions of brand-name products and their prices are expected to drop over time. When a brand-name drug first loses its patent protection, prices fall slowly.
  • Over the next couple of years, as more competitors enter the market, the prices drop even more.
  • An imbalance in supply and demand is said to be the root cause of recent changes in the generics drug market.
  • In the US, with the Food and Drug Administration clearing out a backlog of generic-drug approvals, more competitors are entering the market.
  • Companies are more aggressively undercutting each other’s prices for making them competitive.
  • Generics companies are missing out on peak profit potential because not as many brand-name products are losing patent protection.
  • Generic companies have gone on acquisition sprees in an effort to head off some of these challenges.
  • But major pharmacy chains, drug wholesalers and pharmacy benefit managers (which operate drug plans for insurers) have united into colossal buying groups.
  • This consolidation in the wholesalers and the retail pharmacy is also a  cause for the deflationary environment.
  • There are only three or four purchasers in the market, which are controlling 90-plus percent of the supply.

What could be the impact?

  • Consumers - Overall drug spending is still on the rise because of the skyrocketing price of new, brand-name drugs.
  • Those who pay cash for generics may not notice a drop in price because many are already cheap.
  • Manufacturers - If the trend continues generic drugmakers will continue to feel pressure on profits in the pharmaceutical market, encounter nearly flat revenues and could become unviable
  • This could drive the  drugmakers to drop out of the market, and the resulting shrinkage in suppliers may lead to vaccine shortage and serious health complications.
  • On the other hand, this could lead to a wave of mergers and acquisitions, reducing competition and leading to higher prices, in the long run.

 

Source: The Hindu

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