Indian drugmakers seek govt tax reliefs, incentives to spur innovation
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[July 06, 2024]
By Rishika Sadam and Kashish Tandon
HYDERABAD (Reuters) - India's pharmaceutical companies are hoping for
tax incentives and financial assistance for research on innovative drugs
as Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government readies a federal finance
budget likely to be presented in July.
The upcoming budget would be Modi's first major policy announcement in
his third term as prime minister.
Indian drug manufacturers must focus on developing complex drugs beyond
the usual generic variety if the country is to continue being renown for
being the 'pharmacy of the world' for its affordable medicines, experts
say.
"If the Indian government can give some income tax exemptions for 5-10
years for any new molecule developed in India...that can pull innovation
to grassroot level...companies will start investing in innovation,"
Bharat Biotech's Chairman Krishna Ella told Reuters on the sidelines of
an event in Hyderabad on Friday.
Bharat Biotech developed India's first indigenous COVID-19 vaccine,
Covaxin.
India, whose pharmaceutical market is expected to be valued at $130
billion by the end of the decade, is the world's third largest
manufacturer of drugs by volume after the United States and China and is
a hub of generic drug manufacturers.
Generic drugs are cheaper versions of brand-name drugs.
In March, research firm Bernstein said that India needs to create a
domestic market where innovative drugs can be profitable at the right
price.
"Spending millions on clinical trials with no pricing power is not a
business they (pharma companies) want to be in," Bernstein said in an
open letter to the prime minister.
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An employee works on a machine as test tubes are kept inside it
during an experiment inside a laboratory at Piramal's Research
Centre in Mumbai August 11, 2014. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui/File Photo
The firm also said insurance
coverage for novel drugs and harmonizing regulatory standards for
manufacturing and clinical trials will be required for fostering
innovation.
India has offered incentives since 2020 to spur the manufacturing of
a broad range of products from drones to drugs in the country. But
manufacturers of novel drugs are not eligible for the incentives
yet.
"I think government is evaluating on how their existing scheme is
working...but industry is expecting a policy from the government to
boost research and development in companies," HIV drugs maker Hetero
Drugs' Chairman Partha Saradhi Reddy told Reuters.
India's export sales, which dominate the U.S. generics market, is
expected to double to $55 billion by 2030, according to a
government-backed trade body Pharmaceuticals Export Promotion
Council of India (Pharmexcil).
"And if you want to have this flag going high in the entire globe
and again...I think probably we have to look a little bit out of the
box," Raja Bhanu, director general of Pharmexcil, said.
(Reporting by Rishika Sadam and Kashish Tandon; Editing by
Jacqueline Wong)
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