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HERO ID
8750642
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
MNEs Contribution to the Indian Pharmaceutical Sector
Author(s)
Mehta, A; Farooqui, HH; Selvaraj, S
Year
2017
Publisher
Emerald Group Publishing Ltd.
Book Title
International Business and Management
Volume
33
Page Numbers
69-87
Language
English
DOI
10.1108/S1876-066X20170000033004
URL
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85029721899&doi=10.1108%2fS1876-066X20170000033004&partnerID=40&md5=01986cf5b2d8285a2fa8079eb91c9449
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Abstract
The Indian pharmaceutical industry accounts for 8% of global production and exports medicines to over 200 countries. Multinational enterprises (MNEs) enter the Indian market either directly through the establishment of subsidiaries or indirectly through licensing arrangements. However, evidence on MNE's contribution toward development in India in terms of capability enhancement and linkages or through other spillover effects is limited. The purpose of this research was to generate evidence on (a) contribution of MNEs in the pharmaceutical market in India, (b) nature and impact of foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows in the Indian pharmaceutical sector, (c) contribution of MNEs in R&D and innovation in India, and (d) MNE's contribution toward introducing new chemical entities (NCEs) and new biological entities (NBEs) in India through a mixed method research design. We conducted an in-depth quantitative analysis on multiple data sets and qualitative interviews of various stakeholders to generate a holistic understanding on the aforementioned research objectives. Our findings suggest that from the perspective of capability enhancement and linkages, the contribution of pharmaceutical MNEs in India is limited. We observed that majority of FDI investments are brownfield against desired greenfield investments. In addition, MNEs are investing far less of profit before tax (PBT) compared with Indian firms on research and development. However, MNEs are contributing significantly toward access to certain pharmaceutical segments like vaccines, hormones, and parenterals, which require sophisticated production facilities, advanced technology, and intellectual capital. Further, MNEs role in innovation and introduction of new medicines (new molecular entity [NME] and NBE New Chemical and Biological Entities (NCEs and NBEs)) in India is significant. We propose that creating a conducive policy environment and predictable regulatory environment can facilitate capability enhancement and linkages through MNEs. Some of the potential policy instruments include appropriate implementation of FDI policy and Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) policy to balance trade and public health. © 2017 by Emerald Publishing Limited.
Keywords
India; Multinational enterprises; Pharmaceutical industry
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