CPI-Adjustment Factors for 2001

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 Excessive Price Guidelines limit price increases to changes in the CPI over a three-year period.

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 on an annual basis of the CPI-adjustment factors for future pricing periods.

The CPI-adjustment factors for 2001 follow:

2001 CPI-Adjustment Factors for All Patented Drug Products (CPI 1992=100)

Benchmark Year
(1)
1998
(2)
1999
(3)
2000
Base-CPI 108.63 110.52 n/a
2001 Forecast CPI 115.43 115.43 115.43
2001 CPI-Adjustment Factor 1.063 1.044 1.021

See the Compendium of Guidelines, Policies and Procedures, Chapter 1, EPG: 6 and Schedule 4. The Compendium is also available under Legislation, Regulations and Guidelines.

The Base CPI is the average of the monthly CPI figures, as published by Statistics Canada, for the benchmark year.

The 2001 Forecast CPI is 115.43 (1992=100) and is based on the actual CPI figures for 1999 (110.52), as published by Statistics Canada, and the latest available inflation projections from the February 2000 Federal Budget (2.3% for 2000 and 2.1% for 2001).

For additional information, patentees can also contact the compliance officer assigned to their company.

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