Brighton Peace and Environment Centre

Drug Dumping

Drug dumping occurs when useless or dangerous pharmaceutical products are donated to developing countries, especially after a humanitarian disaster. Aid workers argue that medical staff can spend up to 70% of their valuable time sorting out the donations.

The scale of the problem

One-third of the world's population has no access to essential medicines. In the poorest parts of Africa and Asia, this figure rises to 50%. This year alone there will be over 40 million deaths in developing countries, and a quarter of these will be due to acute respiratory infections, diarrhoeal diseases, tuberculosis and malaria – all conditions which can be cured if only the medicines and healthcare were available.

US Tax regulations

US tax legislation is designed to encourage pharmaceutical companies to make ‘gifts in kind’ to the developing world. However, this often acts as an incentive for inappropriate donations, and even for the pharmaceutical companies to pursue their own interests, often at the expense of the healthcare of the developing world.
Compliance with the World Health Organisation guidelines for essential drugs is not included in the criteria for deciding tax break eligibility.

What is going wrong?

In conclusion, many donations of drugs are made based on the needs of the pharmaceutical companies, not on the needs of the recipients, and may have a negative rather than a positive effect.

A success story

Merck's Iverectin Donation Programme:
Since 1998, Merck & Co have donated Mectizan to over 25 million people in 31 countries to treat onchocerciasis (river blindness), through a programme with the World Bank, WHO, many NGO's and the UN. It has been hailed a success because of its sustainability, and the company has said that it will continue the programme until the disease is eradicated.

The tax system should be amended to reward companies for these kind of long term, WHO-led, sustainable donations.

Some failures

What you can do

See (External) War on Want 's document outlining recommendations that would help the problem. For example, tax credits should be geared towards providing the medecines actually needed on the ground; and UK pharmaceutical companies that intend to take advantage of deductions in tax bills due to donations should list the donation publicly on their annual accounts.
Lobby your MP about these issues. Write to pharmaceutical companies, demanding that these recommendations are implemented. If they do not support War on Want's recommendations, use your consumer power and boycott their products - most pharmaceutical companies also make shampoos, soft drinks etc.


printer friendly version ( Tags: )

Brighton Peace & Environment Centre, Address: 39-41 Surrey Street, Brighton, BN1 3PB. United Kingdom.
Tel: UK (01273) 766610 Email: info@bpec.org Web: www.bpec.org
Company Registration No. 6166971

Validate (External) XHTML or (External) CSS .

Change Text Only Settings

Graphic version of this page