From Passive to Active Industrial Policy:
Improving Locally Manufactured Supplies
to the Tanzanian Health Sector
This brief reports findings from a REPOA research project, with the Open University, UK, and ACTS, Nairobi, on Industrial Productivity and Health Sector Performance, including interviews in 2013–14 with seventeen manufacturers and distributors.
From Passive to Active Industrial Policy: Improving Locally Manufactured Supplies to the Tanzanian Health Sector
Seizing a major opportunity: industrial development with health sector benefits Local manufacturers in Tanzania are not sharing in the large and expanding market for health-related commodities. The health sector buys medicines and other supplies such as cotton wool, protective gloves, syringes, diagnostic test kits, laboratory supplies, medical equipment, and infection control items such as soap […]
Reversing Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Decline in Tanzania
Policy Options and Constraints Tanzania is rapidly losing its pharmaceutical production capability, and therefore its ability to supply one of its population’s basic needs. The loss undermines Tanzania’s medium-term security of supply of essential medicines. It threatens cumulative industrial and employment decline in one of Tanzania’s few higher-skill sectors and in local suppliers, including plastics […]
Improving the Supply Chain for the Health Sector: What Role for Local Manufacturing?
This paper provides new evidence on the pattern of local and importedsupplies to different health sectors and via different supply chains in Tanzania. It shows that around 16% of the medicines found on shelves from our tracer sample had been manufactured in Tanzania; about 15% came from Kenya; and nearly 70% were from outside East […]
Reversing Pharmaceutical Manufacturing
Decline in Tanzania: Policy Options and
Constraints
This policy brief reports findings from a REPOA research project, with The Open University, UK, and ACTS, Nairobi, entitled Industrial Productivity andHealth Sector Performance.