Africa, emerging hub for pharma and patients
Africa may be the only pharmaceutical market where genuinely
high growth is still achievable. Here’s what’s driving that strength and how
companies should react.
Recent report by Mckinsey titled ‘Insights into
Pharmaceuticals and Medical Products’ revealed that the value of Africa’s
pharmaceutical industry jumped to $20.8 billion in 2013 from just $4.7 billion
a decade earlier. That growth is continuing at a rapid pace. It is however
predicted that the market will be worth $40 billion to $65 billion by 2020.
That’s good news for multinationals and pharmaceutical
companies seeking new sources of growth as developed markets stagnate. It’s
also good news for patients, who have gained access to medicines previously
unavailable on the continent. Yet it isn’t enough to know where the industry’s
next growth engine can be found.
What’s driving growth
Africa’s pharmaceutical markets are growing in every sector.
Between 2013 and 2020, prescription drugs are forecast to grow at a compound
annual growth rate of 6 percent, generics at 9 percent, over-the-counter
medicines at 6 percent, and medical devices at 11 percent, according to the
Mckinsey report. Three factors are driving this growth:
Urbanization
Africa’s population is undergoing a massive shift. By 2025,
two-fifths of economic growth will come from 30 cities of two million people or
more; 22 of these cities will have GDP in excess of $20 billion. Cities enjoy
better logistics infrastructures and healthcare capabilities, and urban
households have more purchasing power and are quicker to adopt modern
medicines.
Healthcare capacity
Between 2005 and
2012, Africa added 70,000 new hospital beds, 16,000 doctors, and 60,000 nurses.
Healthcare provision is becoming more efficient through initiatives such as
Mozambique’s switch to specialist nurse anesthetists and South Africa’s use of
nurses to initiate antiretroviral drug therapy. The introduction of innovative
delivery models is increasing capacity still further.
The business environment
To create a more
supportive environment for business, governments have introduced price controls
and import restrictions to encourage domestic drug manufacture; required
country-specific labeling to reduce counterfeiting and parallel imports; and
tightened laws on import, wholesale, and retail margins.
In the pharma
industry, meanwhile, pharmacy chains are consolidating, horizontal and vertical
integration is on the rise, and manufacturing is expanding. A flurry of mergers
and acquisitions, joint ventures, strategic alliances, partnerships, and
private-equity deals are further extending Africa’s markets.
What it takes to win
In a world of slowing and stagnating markets, Africa
represents perhaps the last geographic frontier where genuinely high growth is
still achievable. Early movers can take these four steps to pursue competitive
advantage:
Focusing on pockets of growth
Africa is not one unified market, but 54 distinct ones, with
wide gaps between countries in terms of their market size, growth trajectory,
macroeconomic landscape, legal structure, and political complexities.
Over the
past decade, ten countries have delivered more than two-thirds of Africa’s GDP
and cumulative growth.1 However, much of the opportunity lies not at country
level, but in cities. Mckinsey analysis shows that 37 percent of African
consumers are concentrated in 30 cities, which will have more consuming
households than Australia and the Netherlands combined by 2025.
Building strong local teams
Real talent is key and requires investment in big, effective
local marketing and sales teams. That means hiring more pharmacy
representatives, building teams’ technical skills, and selecting and developing
strong local managers to lead them. Sales teams also should be set up in a
flexible way that enables them to be responsive to the needs of local markets.
Partnerships
Global pharmaceutical
companies need local business partners—manufacturers, packaging companies, and
distributors—to help them navigate the continent’s many markets, with their
widely varying consumer preferences, price points, manufacturing, and
distribution infrastructures. In the absence of a pan-African pharma regulatory
body, they also need to invest in local partnerships to understand varying
regulatory environments.
Partnerships with governments are equally important, whether
they involve working with medical opinion leaders to guide research priorities
and secure funding, or collaborating with health ministries and nongovernmental
organizations to provide public-awareness campaigns, health screening,
treatment, equipment, and training for hospitals and clinics.
In parts of Africa,
supply and distribution mechanisms still pose challenges: regulations are
evolving, transport and logistics infrastructures are patchy, and lead times
can be long. The ability to innovate the distribution channel and set up
effective operations against this challenging backdrop is critical to capturing
growth opportunities. Helpful strategies include locating fixed assets in
countries with well-established political and business structures, outsourcing
supply chains to third-party operators, and partnering with local logistics
providers to identify efficient transport routes.
In the key area of customs and border control, companies
should work with the most reliable agents to minimize shipping delays, use only
bonded distribution centers, and ensure all customs paperwork is airtight.
In a world of slowing and stagnating markets, Africa
represents the last geographic frontier where high growth is still achievable.
As ever, the key to success lies in understanding individual markets in
granular detail. Early movers with the right approach should be able to capture
competitive advantage.
Africa will continue to grow for the foreseeable future.
Now is the time for drug companies to decide whether they want to be part of
that growth and, more important, play an active role in improving public
health.
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