There's something about kenya retail sector that I don't understand. There's consolidation going on in the pharmacy retail sector. Haltons and Good life are busy acquiring independent pharmacies . However the two upcoming pharmacy giants products are more expensive than independents stores. I'd have thought with economy of scale their products would be cheaper. Someone needs to start an online pharmacy store and give the brick and mortal guys a run for their money.
Kenyan retail prices never make sense in comparison to established western markets. For example, Brookside milk costs more per L if you buy the 2L container than if you buy 4 triangular packets of 1/2L.
We do have an online pharmacies with pikipiki delivery:
http://www.epharmacy.co.ke/ and
www.kenyaonlinepharmacy.com, among others.
No clue on how they're doing. Never tried them and probably wouldn't.
The problem we have with pharmacies is the sheer amount of counterfeit medicines flooding the country, massively distorting the
price perception of wanainchi suffering under extremely tight budgets. I have a friend who owns a pharmacy and the stories she tells me about the returns in importing and selling counterfeits, in a country where wealth guarantees 99.99998% immunity (Chris Murungaru of Anglo-Leasing fame, a veterinary doctor, is rumored to be a major player), are absolutely staggering:
Not a bad investment. Then, of course, the penalties are laughably outdated:
The penalty in Kenya for those dealing in counterfeit medicine is, for instance, a jail term of six months and a fine of about Sh20,000, which is not deterrent enough, said Mr Athman Hemed, an inspector at the Kenya Pharmacy and Poisons Board.
But then of course the next elections are
always more important.