Abstract
Health care forms a large economic sector in all countries, and procurement of medicines and other essential commodities necessarily creates economic linkages between a country's health sector and local and international industrial development. These procurement processes may be positive or negative in their effects on populations' access to appropriate treatment and on local industrial development, yet procurement in low and middle income countries (LMICs) remains under-studied: generally analysed, when addressed at all, as a public sector technical and organisational challenge rather than a social and economic element of health system governance shaping its links to the wider economy. This article uses fieldwork in Tanzania and Kenya in 2012–15 to analyse procurement of essential medicines and supplies as a governance process for the health system and its industrial links, drawing on aspects of global value chain theory. We describe procurement work processes as experienced by front line staff in public, faith-based and private sectors, linking these experiences to wholesale funding sources and purchasing practices, and examining their implications for medicines access and for local industrial development within these East African countries. We show that in a context of poor access to reliable medicines, extensive reliance on private medicines purchase, and increasing globalisation of procurement systems, domestic linkages between health and industrial sectors have been weakened, especially in Tanzania. We argue in consequence for a more developmental perspective on health sector procurement design, including closer policy attention to strengthening vertical and horizontal relational working within local health-industry value chains, in the interests of both wider access to treatment and improved industrial development in Africa.
Highlights
Despite a huge increase in development aid for health and a major improvement in access to treatment for HIV/AIDS and TB, access to essential medicines remains a crisis in Sub-Saharan Africa (WHO, 2011)
Using evidence from primary research on supply chains and industrial suppliers in Tanzania and Kenya, we argue here for an approach to procurement analysis and policy, employing aspects of global value chain (GVC) theory, that can that can identify and respond to the embeddedness of procurement processes in the governance of local health systems and their links to the wider local economy
We examine health sector procurement as a social and economic activity, including complex front line labour processes and their implications for access to treatment; wholesaling and related global trading and funding relationships; and the impacts on local industrial development
Summary
Despite a huge increase in development aid for health and a major improvement in access to treatment for HIV/AIDS and TB, access to essential medicines remains a crisis in Sub-Saharan Africa (WHO, 2011). Donors' large scale international procurement of medicines aims to reduce prices and assure quality through pre-qualification of suppliers, international tendering, and pooled procurement processes (Global Fund, 2012; P4i initiative http://www.theglobalfund.org/en/p4i/). Using evidence from primary research on supply chains and industrial suppliers in Tanzania and Kenya, we argue here for an approach to procurement analysis and policy, employing aspects of global value chain (GVC) theory, that can that can identify and respond to the embeddedness of procurement processes in the governance of local health systems and their links to the wider local economy. We aim to contribute to research literature on health system strengthening including potential benefits in Africa of strengthening local industrial linkages (Sidibé et al, 2014; Massard da Fonseca, 2017)
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