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Big Pharma / THE FACTS New Internationalist 362, November 2003

Prescription for profit

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  Big Pharma / THE FACTS New Internationalist 362, November 2003. Prescription for profit. Most profitable industries (ranked by percentage return on revenues, 2001). Top Dogs. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Prescription for profit

  Big Pharma / THE FACTS

New Internationalist 362,November 2003

Page 2: Prescription for profit

Prescription for profit

Most profitable industries

(ranked by percentage

return

on revenues, 2001)

Page 3: Prescription for profit

Top Dogs • In 2002 each of the Big

Pharma top ten had sales over $11.5 billion

• Mergers are leading to

behemoths with ever-increasing power. In 1995, 25 companies controlled over half the global drugs market; by 2000, just 15 managed to do the same thing.

Page 4: Prescription for profit

Carve up

• Of the 10 best-selling drugs of 2002, the top two (worth $13.5 billion in sales) were aimed at reducing cholesterol, one tackled high blood pressure, one ulcers, and two were antidepressants.

Page 5: Prescription for profit

Friends in high places

Big Pharma spends more on lobbying politicians and regulatory bodies than any other industry.

 

• In the US in 2000, the industry spent $92.3 million on 625 lobbyists (more than one for every member of Congress).

 

• The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) have upped the proposed spend for 2004 to $150 million.

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To market, to market

Between 1997 and 2002, promotion to healthcare professionals in the US doubled to $18.5 billion. Direct-to-consumer advertising added another $3 billion.

Big Pharma spends lavishly to push its wares.

Page 7: Prescription for profit

In 2001, leading US drug companies spent almost two-and-a-half times more on marketing, advertising and

administration than they did on R&D.