In this recent article from ‘The Economist’, the author
discusses the impact of dense and complex global supply chain networks on the
highly – regulated pharmaceutical industry. As global conglomerates acquire and
partner with companies in developing nations, their supply chain networks are
growing denser. These global networks need an efficient checks and balance
system to regulate the drug development and manufacturing process.
One such
partnership which has received a lot of flak in recent times, is of Japan’s Daiichi Sankyo and India’s Ranbaxy – these two
independent companies joined forces in 2008 and are aiming at the United
States as their next market base. However, the FDA – the regulatory body of the United States - is
standing guard and expanding the regulatory agency’s outreach to these nations.
The FDA has already stepped up its audits of foreign drug
factories, especially in India, where last year it conducted 18 times as many
as it had ten years earlier. FDA’s presence is continuously growing. According
to a new American law, the FDA can collect fees from foreign drug manufactures to help
pay for the inspection of their factories. The agency now has 12 permanent
staff in India and is hiring seven more.
In the last year itself, FDA has banned a few of Ranbaxy’s production
plants in India and is raiding many more. Therefore, while the cost of
production might be low in India, there are other costs we have to keep in
mind. Other huge, additional costs include regulatory body fees, millions of
dollar worth law for quality issues and a harmed reputation – costs which are
not helping these companies and their image at all.
My question is, is diversification and offshoring to
developing countries a boon or a bane? Keeping in mind the multiple factors
which affect a company, is cost more important than the company’s reputation and
image? Also, how can a company strike
the perfect balance between profit and image while ‘land-grabbing’ greener
pastures?
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