Cost-Containment Mechanisms for Essential Medicines, Including Antiretrovirals, in China - Health Economics and Drugs Series No. 013
(2003; 30 pages) [French] [Spanish] Ver el documento en el formato PDF
Índice de contenido
Ver el documentoAcknowledgements
Ver el documentoTerms of reference
Cerrar esta carpetaIntroduction
Ver el documentoCost-effective medicine selection
Ver el documentoPrice information
Ver el documentoInternational open tendering
Ver el documentoVoluntary discount agreements
Ver el documentoVoluntary licensing
Ver el documentoCompulsory licensing
Ver el documentoLocal state production
Ver el documentoGovernment price controls
Ver el documentoReduction of import and other taxes for essential medicines, and rational dispensing practices
Ver el documentoPublic investment in R & D for new medicines: A mid- to long-term strategy
Ver el documentoBackground and experiences with voluntary agreements
Ver el documentoCountry rights to be protected in voluntary agreements for reduction of prices of medicines
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenidoCompulsory licensing - practical aspects and procedures
Ver el documentoConcluding comments
Ver el documentoList of persons contacted
Ver el documentoFurther reading
 

Reduction of import and other taxes for essential medicines, and rational dispensing practices

Reducing import and other taxes on pharmaceuticals may serve to lower final prices to consumers. Where there is competition, such taxes will clearly add to the final price of a product, an add-on to the wholesale price. Where patent protections are in place, patent holders have much more pricing discretion, and may set wholesale prices with an eye to the final retail price. Thus tax reductions may not translate into reduced retail prices, or price reductions equivalent to the tax reduction. Whether tax reductions thus benefit consumers will turn in significant part on the particularities of specific markets: whether products are patented, whether price controls are in place, how patent holders choose to act and pricing discretion available to pharmacies and dispensing agencies.

Pharmaceutical dispensaries may engage in significant price mark-ups, or unscientific dispensing practices that favour use of brand-name and higher-cost products at the expense of generics and lower-cost alternatives. As is the case in many countries, China may consider regulations to require or prefer generic substitution, where safe and effective generics exist. Many price-increasing and unscientific dispensing practices relate to the percentage mark-up by dispensaries. To realign dispensary incentives, China may consider regulations stipulating that pharmacies charge a flat fee per sale, as opposed to a percentage of sales.

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Última actualización: le 3 mayo 2013