Competitive Dynamics in the Informal Economy The case of Illegal Pharmaceutical...
Competitive Dynamics in the Informal Economy The case of Illegal Pharmaceutical Drugs
This project aims to develop a competitive dynamics theory of the informal economy, which is currently lacking in academic research. Specifically, this project will adopt an institutional theory perspective to better understand th...
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INSTITUTO DE EMPRESA
La educación superior mediante la realización de las siguientes funciones: a) la creación, desarrollo, transmisión y crítica de la ciencia,...
TRL
4-5
| 130K€
Fecha límite participación
Sin fecha límite de participación.
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Información proyecto IllegalPharma
Duración del proyecto: 73 meses
Fecha Inicio: 2016-12-13
Fecha Fin: 2023-01-31
Líder del proyecto
INSTITUTO DE EMPRESA
La educación superior mediante la realización de las siguientes funciones: a) la creación, desarrollo, transmisión y crítica de la ciencia,...
TRL
4-5
| 130K€
Presupuesto del proyecto
1M€
Fecha límite de participación
Sin fecha límite de participación.
Descripción del proyecto
This project aims to develop a competitive dynamics theory of the informal economy, which is currently lacking in academic research. Specifically, this project will adopt an institutional theory perspective to better understand three fundamental outcomes in the informal economy: market entry (illegal businesses’ decision to be active in a specific niche), price competition (price differentials between legal and illegal products), and product quality (quality of products sold in illegal businesses). The main conceptual proposition suggested in this project is that selling products through illegal means may still be perceived as a legitimate activity. Building on this statement, it will be proposed that the degree in which actors perceive the sale of an illegal product as a more or less legitimate activity will influence (1) entrepreneurs’ decision to illegally enter such market, (2) consumers’ willingness to pay for such illegal product (i.e., price differential versus the legal version of the product) and (3) manufacturers’ motivation to keep quality standards for that illegal product. The empirical setting for this study will be the illegal sale of pharmaceutical drugs. The sale of illegal pharmaceuticals accounts for more than 10% of the medicines market and over €30 billion in annual earnings (World Health Organization, 2003). It represents one of the biggest challenges for societies in that, attending to the WHO’s Department of Essential Medicines and Health Products, anywhere from 100,000 to a million people die every year due to falsified drugs. Accordingly, this study aims to provide two main contributions: (1) an academic contribution by developing a radically new theory of the competitive dynamics in the informal economy, and (2) a practical contribution by providing a better understanding of the determinants of the informal economy that could help policy makers and regulators in their goal of fighting the trading of illegal medicines.