Diabolic Digest
Is
parallel trade a malaise or cure?
As
the EU prepares to expand eastwards, new battle lines are being drawn in the
confrontation over national price-setting for prescription drugs - and in the
cross-border parallel trade it engenders in the light of free movement of goods
across the single market.
July 2002
Parallel traders, or wholesalers who transport
cheap drugs across the EU, say their business embodies the free market ethos
lacking in the patented industry.
They claim they are performing an important public service for national health
services, the taxpayer and individual patients.
But drug firms argue that price-setting sits awkwardly with the concept of a
free and open market and say the parallel trade is a symptom of this malaise.
They complain the trade is costing them dearly in lost revenue that should be
pumped into research and development (R&D), which has allowed the US to
pull ahead of Europe in the innovation stakes.
"We're a couple of years away from expanding to the east and what's going
to happen?" asks Brian Ager, director-general of pharmaceutical industry
group EFPIA.
"Medical products will flood back west," Ager said, arguing that this
would rob drug firms of revenue desperately needed for expanding research
budgets and may cause shortages in the source country.
EFPIA estimates that the parallel trade is already costing drug firms over 3.5
billion euro - about 5% of the total market - each year in lost sales and
knocking 1 billion euro off their bottom line. Meanwhile, research budgets for
drug companies, which have doubled in the last decade, are suffering from
diminishing returns with the increasing complexity of the science and
regulations involved.
Parallel traders question the industry's maths and say drug firms make a large
enough profit.
They say that they help combat the monopoly drug firms enjoy with their patents
and offer savings.
"Pharmaceutical companies make double-digit profits, making it one of the
most lucrative industries in the world," says Donald Macarthur,
secretary-general of the European Association of Euro-Pharmaceutical Companies,
a parallel traders' umbrella group. "And there's no evidence that parallel
trade hurts R&D," he adds. Macarthur estimates that parallel traders
save the British taxpayers alone 100 million euro, as well as hundreds of
millions more euro across Europe.
He suggests drug companies should divert some of their huge marketing budgets,
which he says outstrip R&D spending, to the development of new drugs.
This article first appeared in the 25-31 July
2002 edition of the European Voice.
© Copyright 2002 The Economist Newspaper Limited. All rights reserved.
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