Faced
with shortages, Egypt lifts cheap drug prices by 20 percent
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[May 17, 2016]
CAIRO (Reuters) - Egypt is
raising the price cap on medicines that cost up to 30 Egyptian pounds
($3.38) by 20 percent in an effort to address drug shortages, the health
minister said on Monday.
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Pharmaceutical companies will now be obliged to offer those
medicines or risk having their licenses revoked, and the ministry is
coordinating with the supplies and military production ministries to
ensure the drugs are on the shelves, the minister told a news
conference.
A weaker currency has made it more expensive to import raw materials
and with the price of finished medicines fixed by the Health
Ministry, some manufacturers have stopped making some cheap generic
medicines to staunch growing financial losses.
Millions of poor Egyptians rely the generic medicines.
Though medicines are classed as essential goods, putting them high
on the priority list at banks deciding how to allocate precious
dollar rations, pharmaceutical companies say they still face serious
problems that force them to slow or pause production.
Egypt has struggled to revive its economy since a 2011 uprising
ushered in years of political instability, scaring off foreign
investors and tourists -- key sources of hard currency. Economic and
political discontent has helped to unseat two presidents in the past
five years.
Many essential medicines, including important cancer drugs have been
hit. In December, the Health Ministry's tally showed 189 drugs were
in short supply but had available substitutes and a further 43 drugs
were in short supply with no substitute.
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In April, drugs with no substitute included migraine treatment
drugs, cold and flu medication, drugs treating psychiatric
disorders, and several antibiotics.
Though drug-producers say they are willing to keep medicine
affordable, the prices of some drugs have not changed since the
1990s, when the dollar was worth between 2.7 and 3.4 pounds.
($1 = 8.8799 Egyptian pounds)
(Writing by Ahmed Aboulenein; Editing by Alison Williams)
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