NEW DELHI, June 5 (AlertNet) - Millions of the world's poorest people could have easier access to life-saving drugs if India introduces an air ticket tax to help fund purchases of cheap medicines for HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis, a senior U.N. official said.
UNITAID,
a U.N. agency which negotiates for cheap medicines from pharmaceutical
manufacturers to treat deadly diseases, is lobbying countries such as
India to join its air ticket levy initiative which began in 2006.
Under the program, countries
put a nominal amount on the cost of air tickets which funds UNITAID to
buy drugs for patients in the developing world. Ten countries have
imposed the levy, generating $200 million annually for cheap medicine.
"What we want in India is a
similar system by which a very small contribution which is painless to
the traveler can be applied to large numbers of travelers," UNITAID
Executive Director Denis Broun told AlertNet in an interview.
"Since air traffic is very high
in India, the small amount of levy makes a huge difference to the
amount of drugs that we can purchase and the number of poor who can
benefit from them."
HIV/AIDS, malaria and
tuberculosis kill 4.4 million people each year, UNITAID says.
Approximately 14.2 million people are in need of anti-retroviral drugs
globally, yet more than half cannot afford them.
India's airlines are reeling
under a debt load of $20 billion and lost $2 billion last year, as high
fuel prices, a weakening rupee and competition kept fares low and costs
high.
But the country boasts the
fastest growing air passenger market of major economies with 61 million
people traveling last year, and still growing.
"People are saying I am coming
at the wrongest possible moment. You hear all these arguments, but they
are absolutely bogus. It has no impact on government budgets, airline
traffic or the economy."
WIN-WIN FOR INDIA
Broun, who met civil aviation
and health officials, said he was proposing a tax of 10 rupees (18 U.S.
cents) on domestic tickets and $1 on international flights. He said
discussions were at a very early stage.
Chile charges $1 per ticket as
their levy, while Brazil charges $2 for international flights, he said.
French passengers pay one euro for domestic and four euros for
international tickets.
Mali, Mauritius, Madagascar,
Cameroon, Congo, Niger and South Korea had also implemented air-ticket
levies, said Broun.
He said it was a win-win
situation for India as 80 percent of the drugs bought by UNITAID are
from Indian pharmaceutical firms and some of which were for Indian
patients.
"It would be a good thing for
India. First of all, Indian patients benefit - 35,000 Indian children
are treated for HIV using drugs paid for by UNITAID," he said.
"We buy most of our drugs from
India so in a sense what would the tax do? It would go back into the
Indian economy into the pharmaceutical sector. So it's difficult to
find arguments to say it would be bad."
(AlertNet is a humanitarian news service run by Thomson Reuters Foundation. Visit http://www.trust.org/alertnet)
(Additional reporting by Anurag Kotoky; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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