The great medicines migration: how China controls key drug supplies

News

In the spring of 2020, as the Covid-19 pandemic took hold, many pharmaceutical companies faced disruptions to their supply chains. Chemicals used to produce the key ingredients in drugs were often sourced from only a few suppliers in China — sometimes from just one.

The pandemic has brought to light just how much the global pharmaceutical supply chain depends on China, even for the most basic ingredients.

This is the final instalment of a Nikkei Asia series on Beijing’s aim to become the centre of the global drug industry. This instalment focuses on China’s market command for active pharmaceutical ingredients — a dominance some western countries are challenging as Covid-19 and geopolitical tensions expose supply-chain vulnerabilities.

Read more here.

A version of this article was first published by Nikkei Asia on April 5 2022. ©2022 Nikkei Inc. All rights reserved

Articles You May Like

Muni buyers focus on primary, traders ignore more UST losses
Russia fires intercontinental ballistic missile at Ukraine for first time, Kyiv says
Acurx Pharmaceuticals to add up to $1 million in bitcoin for treasury reserve, following MicroStrategy’s playbook
Biden allows Ukraine to strike Russia with US-made long-range missiles
Chinese tech groups build AI teams in Silicon Valley