Public-Private Roles in the Pharmaceutical Sector - Implications for Equitable Access and Rational Drug Use - Health Economics and Drugs Series, No. 005
(1997; 115 pages) [French] [Spanish] View the PDF document
Table of Contents
View the documentAuthors
View the documentAcknowledgements
View the documentAbbreviations and Acronyms
View the documentExecutive summary
Close this folder1. Public and private roles in the pharmaceutical sector
View the document1.1 Some definitions of public-private roles
View the document1.2 Questions on public-private roles
View the document1.3 The context of change
View the document1.4 Principles for assessing public-private roles
Open this folder and view contents2. Pharmaceutical markets: structure and performance
Open this folder and view contents3. Essential state responsibilities
Open this folder and view contents4. The public-private mix in drug markets: a global picture1
Open this folder and view contents5. Market mechanisms in public drug supply
Open this folder and view contents6. Promoting public health needs through the private sector
Open this folder and view contents7. Pharmaceutical production and public-private roles
Open this folder and view contents8. Capacity-building and the process of change
Open this folder and view contents9. Managing public-private roles
View the documentReferences
View the documentGlossary
View the documentBack Cover
 

1.2 Questions on public-private roles

This document considers seven questions regarding the appropriate roles of the public and private sectors:

1. How is the pharmaceutical market organized and what makes it different from other markets?

2. What are the essential responsibilities of the state in the pharmaceutical sector?

3. What is the current public-private mix in pharmaceutical markets?

4. Can market mechanisms help to improve efficiency and ensure access to essential drugs in the public sector?

5. What mechanisms best promote the availability, affordability and rational use of drugs in the private sector?

6. What role should the government play in the manufacture of pharmaceuticals?

7. What capacities are needed to manage changing roles and how can these capacities be enhanced?

The questions are considered in order. Section 2 considers the nature of pharmaceutical markets. From this analysis it is clear that pharmaceutical markets differ from markets for most other goods and services and that, in order for them to operate effectively, government intervention is required. Section 3 describes the essential state responsibilities in the pharmaceutical sector. Section 4 describes the current global pattern of the public-private mix in pharmaceutical markets. Section 5 looks at private mechanisms for public drug supply. Section 6 reviews mechanisms for meeting health needs through the private sector. Finally, Section 7 explores the arguments and evidence on the role of the state in pharmaceutical manufacturing. In Section 8 the document considers the implications of reform in public-private roles for government, and in particular government capacity to manage new roles and the process of change. Section 9 presents conclusions.

The remainder of this section considers further the context of public-private roles in the pharmaceutical sector and the principles that help assess those roles.

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Last updated: May 3, 2013