Introduction
Bangladesh, a low middle-income country, developed
a burgeoning pharmaceutical sector thanks to its pioneering Drug Policy of 1982.[1] Now
it claims a market share of around 98 % of total drug sales compared to 25 %
before the National Drug Policy was enacted in 1982. Specialized products like
ant-cancer drugs, vaccines and hormonal preparations are imported to meet the
remaining demand. According to the Bangladesh Association of Pharmaceutical
Industries (BAPI) and Directorate General of Drug Administration (DGDA),
approximately 257 licensed pharmaceutical manufacturers (allopathic) are
operating in Bangladesh and about 150 are functional[2].
Currently, it is the second-highest contributor to the national exchequer
(1.83% to GDP in 2017-’18) after the Readymade Garments industry. The industry
is largely protected from external competition and is projected to grow beyond
US$ 6 billion by 2025, with an export potential of US$ 450 million.[3] It
currently exports to 144 countries including the UK, EU and USA.
Current
Scenario and R&D vulnerability
Though there are around 150 functional
manufacturers, the pharmaceutical market in Bangladesh is highly concentrated
and limited to a few big companies. The top ten companies have 70 % of the
market share and the top 20 have 78 %. Eighty per cent of the drugs produced
are generic and 20% are patent drugs. Bangladesh pharmaceutical sector enjoys
the benefits of TRIPs i.e., exempted from patent protection by WTO for an
extended period until 2033.
This comfort zone has produced a kind of vulnerability
related to investments in R&D, found to be highest in the pharmaceutical
sector in Bangladesh consequent on TRIPS agreement[4]. A recent study on the relationship of R&D
investments and firm performance concluded that “investors of Bangladesh do not
consider R&D expenditure to be a creator of innovation rather they seem to
be affected negatively in their assessment of the firm’s financial condition by
R&D expenditure”.[5] The
study found 80% of the sampled farms below average levels of innovativeness. “The
tendency has been to utilise the TRIPS flexibilities to reverse engineer
existing products and focus on earning quick money rather than going for
long-term investment keeping future strategic interests in the focus”.[6] The top 30 local companies have well-equipped
product development (PD) department instead of full-fledged R&D.[7] As
pharmaceutical companies shy away from innovativeness, it will become difficult
for them simply to rely on producing generic medicines in the long term.
Recent developments in R&D in the pharmaceutical sector in Bangladesh
However, the situation is changing fast due to the
sector going global and being fiercely competitive, and consequent improvement
in investments in R&D by the big manufacturers. As a result of these
R&D investments, Bangladesh is now capable of producing specialized
delivery products like inhalers, pre-filled syringe injections, lyophilized
injections, and dry-powder inhaler and sustained-release formulations. The
country has already developed production facilities for tablets, capsules,
liquid preparations, dry suspension, injections, ointment/cream, nasal spray
and granules in sachets[8].
One other area where strategic R&D investments
are taking place is in the production of Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients
(APIs). The pharmaceutical sector is dependent on imported raw materials (APIs)
mainly from China and India (+other EU countries) as it is mainly involved in
the final formulation stage. This has made the sector vulnerable to external
shock, the price of medicines being dependent upon the cost of imported raw
materials. Development of technology and the manufacturing of pharmaceutical
raw materials, especially the APIs, involves sophisticated and advanced level
engineering and chemical operations which are largely absent in countries like
Bangladesh. As of July 2019, only 15 large companies produced 40 APIs. Among
those, Active Fine is the only company which is fully involved in producing API.
Ganashastha Pharmaceuticals Limited (GPL) alone accounts for about 60% of the
raw materials manufactured in Bangladesh.
To facilitate the local
production of APIs in the country, Bangladesh government has come forward to establish
an API park in 2008 to accommodate around top 50 pharmaceuticals under a public-private
partnership with BAPI. It is expected that the country can save at least
70% of the import cost of raw material by producing raw material at API Park
and make Bangladesh more competitive in the global market. National Board of
Revenue (NBR) has exempted 15% VAT to local API producers on imported raw
materials and reagents till December 2025 to support the backward linkage of
the country’s pharmaceuticals industry2.
Another aspect of R&D that
is getting priority in recent times is the ‘smart innovation’ i.e, use of
information technology in the management, development and production of drugs
as far as possible. Some of the big companies are already in the process of
automation of their management, including the R&D sector. Besides, capacity
in biotech labs and facilities has also opened windows of opportunity for
innovation of new drugs and processes.
:
Bangladesh’s pharmaceutical sector is at a
crossroad. It has got the forward-looking entrepreneurs with an eye on the
global market, human resources with necessary skills and business-friendly
environment, and WTO/TRIPS advantage until 2033. There are substantial
challenges related to capacity development e.g., the establishment of
bioequivalence laboratory, regulatory regime and resources for investment. Once
these are overcome and combined with strategic investment in R&D, the
sector with appropriate nurturing by the policymakers can make a breakthrough in
improving equitable access to medicines at affordable cost at home and abroad.
Excerpts from a
forthcoming study on the topic
[1] Eurasian
J Emerg Med. 2019;18(2): 104-9. DOI:10.4274/eajem.galenos.2019.43765
[3] https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20200721005576/en/Bangladesh-Pharmaceutical-Market-Opportunity-Outlook-to-2025---ResearchAndMarkets.com
[4] A
firm-level analysis of the vulnerability of the Bangladeshi pharmaceutical
industry to the TRIPS Agreement: Implications for R&D capability and
technology transfer. Procedia Economics and Finance 2013;5: 30 – 39. doi:
10.1016/S2212-5671(13)00006-3
[6] WTO
Decision on TRIPS and Public Health. http://cpd.org.bd/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Research-Report-2-Rahman-and-Farin-2018_WTO-Decision-on-TRIPS-and-Public-Health.pdf
[7] R&D Status in Pharmaceutical Sector in Bangladesh. https://tinyurl.com/y2ylnsev
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