HC Deb 28 January 1983 vol 35 c543W
Mrs. Dunwoody

asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if he will estimate the savings to the National Health Service if generic drugs were prescribed whenever a suitable generic drug could replace a particular branded drug.

Mr. Kenneth Clarke

If all prescriptions in England in 1981 had been written and dispensed using generic names whenever possible, the saving to the NHS would have been £23 million. Prices for generic drugs fell during 1982 and although figures are not yet available, the potential saving would now be higher.

This figure of £23 million does not represent the actual saving that would be achieved, because manufacturers do not set the prices of individual drugs in isolation. They adopt a pricing policy for their entire range and if sales of a particular branded product declined, there could well be an increase in the price of some other drug for which there was no generic equivalent.