They are now getting a taste of the same medicine from Big Pharma.
Pharma multinationals are adopting the same tactics to expand their presence and gain market share in India.
International drug majors such as GSK Pharma, Sanofi and Pfizer have cut prices 25-75 per cent for select products in therapies for the cardiovascular system and diabetes, among others.
Deepak Malik, senior research analyst, Emkay Global, says dropping prices have helped MNCs maintain growth and broaden their portfolios, especially in areas where they were not very strong.
GSK Pharma, for example, is selling cholesterol-lowering drug atorvastatin under its brand name Lilo at 60-70 per cent discount to branded drugs of the same molecule from Cipla, Dr Reddy's and Intas Pharma.
While the GSK Pharma spokesperson says atorvastatin is a branded generic and therefore the pricing is based on affordability and product strategy, analysts say the company has a negligible share in the cardio segment and has taken this route to expand presence.
In addition to this, the company is adopting a dual pricing strategy for its product portfolio.
Says Monica Joshi of Avendus Capital, "While for its legacy products the company is likely to maintain premium pricing, for select branded generics it has dropped prices to get a foothold."
Though the strength of MNCs is their patent portfolio, this new strategy has been worked out as there have been a few patented products launched in the country and many of these have faced litigation.
This, coupled with the affordability factor, has meant patented molecule drugs have a share of less than two per cent in the Rs 56,000-crore (Rs 560-billion) pharma market.
Another global pharma major Sanofi, too, has been selling its cardio molecule Metoprolol at a discount of over 30 per cent to
Sanofi-aventis to buy Genzyme
Sachin, MSD's IPL base price 1.84 crore
All pharma M&As to be cleared by CCI: Plan panel group
India's troubled border is NGO Sarhad's mission field
Atorvastatin: Dr Reddy's to contest Pfizer's suit