Once patent-linkage gets embedded in our law, cheap drugs won’t get market entry Nearly 30 months back, US drug multinational Merck Sharp & Dohme (MSD) had petitioned the Delhi High Court to restrain Indian firm Glenmark Pharmaceuticals from manufacturing and selling its anti-diabetes drugs viz., Zita and Zita-Met, which violated MSD’s patents. The drugs contain sitagliptin, for which MSD holds a patent in India. Though Glenmark claimed that it had used sitagliptin phosphate, on which MSD held no patent, the court remained unimpressed with the Indian pharma company’s attempt to paint the two compounds as fundamentally distinct. In its October 7 judgment, the High Court restrained Glenmark “by permanent injunction” from making, using, selling, distributing, advertising, exporting, offering for sale or dealing...
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NJAC WAS AN IMPROVEMENT
The collegium system is flawed, and the apex court has admitted it. Yet, the court has endorsed the process On October 16, 2015, a five-judge Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court of India vide a majority vote of four-to-one quashed the 99th Constitution Amendment which established the National Judicial Appointment Commission for the appointment of judges to the apex court and the High Courts. The court also resurrected the collegium system which the NJAC Act had replaced on April 13, 2015. The judges took umbrage to the NJAC being an onslaught on the independence of the judiciary. Their primary discomfiture was with inclusion of the Law Minister and two eminent persons in a committee of six (the other three being...
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Gas price loss is urea’s gain
It’s time to leverage the conditions. Freeing distribution and movement will also make a difference Under new pricing guidelines notified in October, 2014, the price of domestic gas was fixed at $5.61 per mBtu on net calorific value (NCV) basis with effect from November 1, 2014 — an increase of 33 per cent over the $4.2 per mBtu prior to that date. The price was applicable till March 31, 2015. The price was arrived at by taking a weighted average of gas prices in Henry Hub (the US), NBP (National Balancing Point, the UK), AGR (Alberta Gas Reference, Canada) and Russia. It was to be revised once in six months based on movement in these indices for a full year,...
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WHERE ARE THE BIG BANG REFORMS?
The Modi Government should be applauded for bringing in key changes, but action is missing in vital areas such as fertilisers, food, power and kerosene. There is a need for reforms in these sectors which are loaded with subsidies Prime Minister Narendra Modi should be applauded for bringing in governance reforms, liberalising foreign direct investment and increasing ease of doing business, but action is missing in vital areas such as fertilisers, food, power and kerosene. These areas are in dire need of big bang reforms. Inefficiency, cost padding/gold plating, pilferage/leakages and corruption are rampant in these sectors, leading to the ballooning of subsidies and associated difficulties, in adhering to fiscal discipline. An expenditure management commission, headed by former Reserve Bank...
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Continue rate cut
ECONOMIC GROWTH : Having made a good head start (though belated), the RBI must not stop as there is potential for another 50-75 basis points reduction Prior to the fourth bi-monthly monetary policy review on September 29, RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan had come under unprecedented pressure to cut the policy repo rate [interest rate at which the apex bank lends money to commercial banks] to help government’s efforts in giving a fillip to the economy and putting it on a higher growth trajectory. Almost all stakeholders – industry and commerce, investors, experts/ economists – were unanimous in demanding a cut. While refraining from taking any position [lest this be misconstrued as interference in RBI’s autonomy], the government had nonetheless given...
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Add 100% FDI to the cart
Allowing 100% FDI in e-tail will make it easier for tax authorities to bring e-com firms under the tax net. In 2012, the UPA had permitted 51% FDI in multi-brand retail (MBR) with riders. The riders included sourcing 30% of requirements from small enterprises, a minimum investment of $100 million, besides giving full leeway to states on whether to grant permission or not. The policy was as bad as saying ‘no’ to FDI in MBR. The Modi government has continued with that policy decision. Finding that the direct route of entering MBR was choked, foreign investors have been looking for opportunities to make inroads. They found one in e-commerce where business was growing leaps and bounds. How did they manage...
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Root cause of inaction in fertiliser reforms
Unless the government accepts a higher MRP for urea, nutrient imbalance cannot be addressed Four major pronouncements on fertiliser reforms need close scrutiny. First, the Prime Minister promised that every farmer would have a soil health card (SHC) to know how much nutrient is needed for a good yield and to keep the soil healthy. What if the results of the soil analysis encapsulated on the SHC require application of more phosphate (P) and potash (K) but the fertilisers carrying these nutrients, other complex fertilisers and so on are too expensive? The pricing consideration Currently, the MRP of dia-ammonium phosphate (DAP, the primary source of P) is four times the price of urea (the main source of nitrogen), whereas muriate...
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Cut theft and freebies to stem power losses
The Centre must deduct the discoms’ losses from the devolution of taxes to the erring states On September 12, 2015, the chief secretaries of states whose state electricity boards (SEBs)—that carry out power distribution—met Union power minister Piyush Goyal with a demand for a fresh bailout package to deal with the SEBs’ accumulated debt of over R3 lakh crore. Goyal took a bold stand by turning down the request. SEBs have already got two bailout packages—R40,000 crore in 2002 and around R2 lakh in 2012. These were given on the promise that SEBs will adjust tariff to plug gaps between revenue and the cost of electricity, besides reducing transmission and distribution (T&D) losses. But, they have failed on both fronts and...
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Don’t override judicial process
Any apprehension that judicial process would take time is ill-founded. The matter is slated for hearing by the SC this month itself. While, presenting the budget for 2015-16, Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had announced the government’s decision not to levy minimum alternate tax [MAT] on capital gains made by foreign portfolio investors [FPIs] from investment in securities from April 1, 2015. In his speech, he had proposed to rationalise MAT provisions for FPIs whereby profits corresponding to their income from capital gains on transactions in securities, which are taxed at a lower rate, would not be subject to MAT. Since the exemption was intended to be applicable only prospectively from financial year 2015-16, the income tax department served show -cause...
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REGULATE ELECTRICITY SUPPLY SYSTEM
The malady afflicting the power sector in Delhi is suggestive of a deeper mess in the country and calls for prompt action During his first shot as the Chief Minister of Delhi, Mr Arvind Kejriwal promised that he would slash power tariff by 50 per cent. He did so, primarily on his conviction that the power distribution companies indulged in financial irregularities, leading to inflated cost of procurement and distribution, which were approved by a pliable Delhi Electricity Regulatory Commission. A clear indication of how the DERC played to its masters tune (under the Sheila Dikshit Government) can be gauged from the fact that former DERC chairman approved 23 per cent reduction in tariff in 2010. After he was removed,...
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