The problems and opportunities
facing midsize pharmaceutical companies in the developed world are similar
to those that will soon face India’s leading drug makers. Historically,
these Indian companies have concentrated on reverse engineering patented
drugs and selling them locally for 8 to 15 percent of what they cost elsewhere.
This strategy is unsustainable, for impending regulatory and demographic
changes are making the Indian market more similar to global markets, thus
forcing Indian companies to compete against global ones according to global
rules. Indian companies must either identify arenas in which they can
compete successfully with the large multinationals or develop new models
of collaboration.
Significant changes are expected in the Indian market over the next
five years. First, in signing the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT), the Indian government agreed to adopt worldwide patent standards
by 2005. Despite industry expectations, the impact on prices is likely
to be limited, since only drugs patented in the West after January 1995
will receive protection, and they are likely to constitute less than 10
percent of the Indian pharmaceutical market by 2010. The real impact of
India’s decision to sign the GATT will be the stagnant sales facing Indian
drug makers, which cannot reverse engineer and launch molecules patented
by multinationals.
Second, rising incomes and a growing number of elderly people—sustained
by advances in hygiene and medicine—are driving a shift in the market
away from sales of vitamins and anti-infective and gastrointestinal treatments
and toward sales of treatments for cardiovascular problems, central-nervous-system
disorders, and other complex ailments. By 2010, cardiovascular and central-nervous-system
treatments, which accounted for only 15 percent of the market in May 1999,
are expected to account for 33 percent (exhibit). This increased convergence
of multinational product pipelines and the Indian market will inspire
multinational pharmaceutical majors, most of which have sat on the sidelines,
to renew their interest in India.
These market shifts will require Indian players to develop new skills
and to form new kinds of partnerships. Since reverse engineering promises
little or no growth, Indian drug makers need their own source of patentable
products. Although taking on the majors may be difficult, Indian companies
could develop their own drugs by focusing on products that would be uneconomical
for the multinationals to develop and commercialize: any drug with a sales
potential of less than $300 million a year. Examples include treatments
for diseases (such as tuberculosis) prevalent in low-price markets. In
developing these treatments, local companies have the advantages of lower
costs and easier access to patients. Moreover, a savvy Indian company
that lacked the resources to conduct basic research could buy such compounds
languishing in Western pipelines. Capturing the full value of these products,
however, will pose a challenge, for Indian pharmaceutical companies typically
lack a significant global sales force; alliances may be required.
Developing drugs independently isn’t the only option. Indian companies,
with their world-class skills in chemical synthesis and process engineering,
could be valuable partners for multinationals. Indian companies could,
for example, help reduce the time it takes Western pharma companies to
produce commercial lot sizes. With today’s time-to-market pressures, six
months saved in scaling up production could be the difference between
a blockbuster and a "me-too" drug. At one end of the scale, an Indian
company could in effect become part of the R&D organization of a large
multinational by specializing in a step in the development process or
in a set of molecules. At the other end, world-class, world-scale Indian
"processing hubs" could serve global players in areas (such as clinical
trials) that leverage India’s cost position.
Finally, Indian companies could position themselves as marketing partners
of choice for multinationals trying to enter the Indian market. A local
company with a dominant franchise and access to India’s 400,000 doctors
would be indispensable for multinationals that lack minimum local scale.
About the Authors
Ashwin Adarkar is a principal in McKinsey’s Los Angeles office, and Sankar Krishnan is a principal and Sanoke Viswanathan is a consultant in the
Mumbai office.