Pharmabiz
 

Few takers for Market Access Initiative scheme of commerce ministry: Pharmexcil

Nandita Vijay, BangaloreMonday, November 22, 2010, 08:00 Hrs  [IST]

The Market Access Initiative (MAI) of 50 per cent of the product registration fee offered to the pharmaceutical exporters by the commerce ministry is found to be largely underutilized, according to the Pharmaceutical Export Promotion Council (Pharmexcil).

The initiative which was introduced in 2004 allows small, medium and large pharma to receive assistance to the tune of a maximum of Rs. 50 lakh annually for any drug which is registered for export anywhere in the world.

Under the MAI scheme, a company could file any number of products for registration. Once the registration is accepted, the regulatory authority of the exporting country will intimate to the company to pay the registration fee through banks. The paid receipts is a documented record for trading clearance and this could be submitted to Ministry of Commerce through Pharmexcil for refund amounting to 50 per cent of the total registration cost. “While this is a big boon to the exporters in the pharma sector, we are surprised that there are very few takers to the scheme”, Raghuveer Kini, additional executive director, Pharmexcil told Pharmabiz.

The reimbursement of product registration charges also covers biotechnology drugs.

The MAI is a big relief for pharma exporters of any size. While many large pharma companies are making use of the reimbursement of registration costs, it is the small and medium companies which have stayed away for the scheme. The key reason could be lack of awareness. In fact, reimbursement of registration costs could increase the number of exporters, he added.

Indian pharma exports is expected to touch $10 billion in 2009-10. According to the pharma trade statistics available from the Directorate General of Commercial Intelligence and Statistics (DGCIS), the exports of pharmaceuticals and fine chemicals stood at US$ 8.61 billion in 2008-09 with a growth rate of 28.54 per cent. Asia is the largest importing region with a share of 30 per cent constituted by Indian pharma exports, followed by Europe at 24 per cent, North America at 21 per cent, Africa at 14 per cent and Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) accounting for 7 per cent.

Further, according to DGCIS, exports of medical herbs and Ayush drugs accounted for US$ 251.9 million in 2008-09 with a growth rate of 27.31 per cent.

Commenting on the underutilization of MAI, Anjan K Roy, president, Karnataka Drugs and Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association (KDPMA) and managing director RL Fine Chem said that the poor response to the scheme is attributed to not the poor awareness but the inability to remember the reimbursement scheme after companies received the registration clearance from the international regulatory authority. Going by the challenging procedures for exports, it is not surprising that many companies overlook and fail to recall this financial support which comes in as a big relief.

“We should now make sincere efforts to educate the small and medium industry which are registering products for exports to maximize the MAI assistance,” added Roy.

 
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