The National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority of India (NPPA) is said to be moving to rein in prices of bulk drugs.
It is to begin analysing pricing trends of 74 bulk drugs that come under the government-notified price-controlled list every quarter.The authority's comparison will be based on three major parameters -- the notified or approved prices of these bulk drugs, the landed cost of the imported bulk drugs and the prices quoted in the trade journals.
NPPA will notify a revised bulk drug price if aberrations are found among these different price points.
It also plans to intensify its surveillance by tracking the cost audit report that drug companies submit to the department of company affairs.
Bulk drugs (the raw material) account typically for over 70 per cent of the cost of a formulation and currently their prices are notified for three years. Interim revisions take place only if the authority detects substantial fluctuations in retail prices.
In other words, it is not the raw material that is tracked for price movements, but the final product. That scheme of things is to change now, Business Standard newspaper reports.
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In November 2005, there were 1,353 instances of annual price increases in medicine packs. In November 2007, the number had dropped to three.
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In comparison, all three medicines that saw price rises in November 2007 were in the range of 0 per cent to 5 per cent.
Source-Medindia
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