What does the information provided suggest is the market


Complete with sufficient amount of Analysis and Evaluation

The Pharmaceutical Industry

1173_Global Pharmaceutical Companies by market capitalisation.jpg

Figure 1: Global Pharmaceutical Companies by market capitalisation, March 2009, $bn

Extract 1 Merck's manoeuvres

In recent times there has been a series of mergers between pharmaceutical companies. Merck, a US company, has agreed to take over Schering-Plough; Pfizer is acquiring Wyeth; and Roche, a Swiss pharmaceutical company, is paying $46.8bn for 44% of Genentech, an American firm.

Big drugs companies hope mergers and takeovers will solve their various problems: the lack of new blockbuster drugs coming through their research pipelines; competition from generic (non-brand name) drugs as patents expire, the global economic crisis, and an over-dependence on sales in America, where health-care reforms are likely to reduce profit margins. However, the evidence suggests that many of the supposed benefits of pharmaceutical mega-mergers fail to materialise: bigger firms are no better at innovation, and are often worse. But bosses are pressing ahead anyway.

The main attraction of buying Schering-Plough is that Merck will double (to 18) the number of drugs it has in late-stage development. Merck will also strengthen its international and over-the-counter sales, both areas where Schering is strong (70% of its revenues come from outside America). In addition, Mr Clark promises that there will be cost savings of $3.5 billion a year after 2011. But this sounds unlikely, given that both companies are already cutting costs heavily. And if the two firms' research teams are so complementary and do not overlap much, as Merck claims, who is going to get sacked?

The deal does at least answer critics who complained that Merck was not acting as vigorously as competitors in buying rivals and moving into new markets. But it also represents a change in strategy for Merck, which unlike many of its competitors has stayed on the sidelines during the industry's previous waves of mega-mergers.

Instead, the company has always preferred to grow by developing new products in its laboratories. The task for Mr Clark, who will become boss of the new company, will be to make the deal go smoothly, despite his lack of experience with big mergers.

Source: Adapted from ‘Merck's manoeuvres' published in The Economist, 13 March 2009.

Extract 2 Letter from the Consumers Union to Federal Trade Commission in the USA

Dear Sir:

On behalf of the Consumers Union, we urge you to review carefully the competitive and innovation consequences of the proposed Pfizer-Wyeth pharmaceutical company mergers. Our members consistently tell us that high and ever-rising health care costs are a major household fear, and high brand name prescription drug prices are a 5 particular concern.

We urge the Federal Trade Commission to review this proposed merger and its impact on

- long-run competition in the pharmaceutical industry and its likely impact on drug prices; 10

- innovation and the development of new, breakthrough drugs.

The merger will result in thousands of employee redundancies. What percent of those lay-offs are in research and development, and are those lay-offs strictly in areas where the two companies were duplicating research, or are new and unique lines of research being terminated?

We are faced with continual abuses of good public policy by many in the industry. For example, some firms use payments to buy delays in the entry of competitive generic drugs into the market.

We hope that you will consider a major study of the entire pharmaceutical industry.

Why are prices for consumers so high, why has the breakthrough drug pipeline slowed down, and what policies should we pursue as a nation to encourage the more rapid discovery of affordable medicines? Is this merger between Pfizer and Wyeth good or bad for the goal of affordable, new, life-saving drugs?

Thank you for your consideration of these views.

William Vaughan Health Policy Analyst Consumers Union

Source: https://www.consumersunion.org/pub/campaignprescriptionforchange/009344.html.

(a) What does the information provided suggest is the market structure of the pharmaceutical industry? Explain your answer.

(b) Discuss the benefits that Merck might expect to gain through the takeover of Schering-Plough.

(c) Evaluate one pricing and one non-pricing strategy that Merck could adopt to increase sales.

(d) To what extent would further mergers and takeovers in the pharmaceutical industry be in the best interests of consumers and employees?

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