SELF-ASSESSMENT TASK
7.14
Pharmaceutical industry mergers beat recession
Ten years ago the global pharmaceutical industry
experienced a spate of mergers. That was when Glaxo
and Astra Zeneca were created and Pfizer became the
world’s number one aft er taking over Warner-Lambert
and, in 2003, Schering-Plough.
In early 2009 three new multi-billion dollar deals were
announced. These were:
■
Roche buying Genentech ($47 billion)
■
Merck’s takeover of Schering-Plough ($41 billion)
■
Pfizer’s purchase of Wyeth ($68 billion).
Each of the newly merged giants has their
specialisms. Roche is big in cancer-treating
drugs, Merck in cholesterol-reducing drugs, while
the largest of all, Pfizer, is big in vaccines, anti-
depressants, oral contraceptives and impotence
aiding products.
The global industry is not short of cash. The reasons
for the latest mergers stem mainly from fierce ongoing
competition from generic drug manufacturers. These
companies can make cheaper copies of drugs once
patents have expired. Many such products are made in
the emerging economies of southern Asia. The knock-
on effects are that big conglomerates are cutting
back on new product development. Instead they are
concentrating resources on new products such as the
Tamiflu vaccine, which is difficult to copy. They are
also buying new products from small businesses and
then using their power to produce these for the global
market.
Read the two features below and then answer the questions that follow.
Source:
Adapted from A. Townend,
Daily Telegraph
, 16 March 2009.
Airline mergers – one too many?
Recession has hit the global airline business hard. Many
of the world’s flag-flying national carriers have found it
necessary to embark on a series of mergers, largely to cut
costs and so reduce their eye-watering trading deficits.
Significant mergers have been:
■
British Airways and Iberia
■
Luft hansa and Swiss
■
Delta and Northwest Airlines
■
United and Continental Airlines
■
Southwest Airlines and AirTran Airways
But is there a block on yet another US merger, that
of American Airlines with US Airways? The Justice
Department claims that the proposed merger ‘threatens
substantial harm to consumers’.
A law professor at the University of Iowa has argued that
the relevant question is not so much why the Justice
Department has moved to block this latest merger but
why it approved that between United and Continental. If
this new merger goes ahead, the US would have just three
main airlines.
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