CPI-Based Price-Adjustment Factors for 2013
The Patent Act specifies the factors to be used by the PMPRB in   determining whether the price of a patented drug product sold in Canada   is excessive. One of these factors is the Consumer Price Index (CPI).   The Board´s Compendium of Policies, Guidelines and Procedures requires   the cumulative increase in a product´s price over any three-year period   be no more than the increase in the CPI over the same period. The   Compendium also sets a cap on year-over-year price increases equal to   one and one-half times the CPI-inflation rate for the year in question.
To allow patentees to set prices in advance, the Board´s   CPI-Adjustment Methodology provides for the calculation of the   CPI-adjustment factors based on forecast changes in the CPI. The Board   informs patentees of these CPI-adjustment factors each year in its April   NEWSletter.
The following table provides CPI-adjustment factors for 2013. These   factors were based on forecasts of annual CPI-inflation rates of 2.1 %   and 2.0% for 2012 and 2013, respectively, as well as the actual 2011   CPI-inflation rate of 2.9%. CPI inflation rates are provided by Finance   Canada (see Government of Canada, Budget 2012: Jobs, Growth and   Long-Term Prosperity, March 29, 2012, Table 2.1).
Forecast 2013 Price-Adjustment Factors for Patented Drug Products
    
      | Benchmark Year | (1) 2010 | (2) 2011 | (3) 2012 | 
    
      | Price-Adjustment Factor | 1.072 | 1.041 | 1.020 | 
These figures imply (1) a maximum allowable cumulative price increase   between 2010 and 2013 of 7.2% for patented drug products with Canadian   sales in 2010 (that is, products whose “benchmark year” is 2010); (2) a   maximum allowable cumulative price increase between 2011 and 2013 of   4.1% for products whose first Canadian sales occurred in 2011; and (3) a   maximum allowable cumulative price increase between 2012 and 2013 of   2.0% for products whose first Canadian sales occurred in 2012. 
In addition, the forecast inflation rate of 2.0% for 2013 implies a   year-over-year price increase cap (applicable to all drug products   regardless of benchmark year) of 3.0% (= 1.5 x 2.0%) for 2013.