bioLIVE league table ranks US top and China bottom - Labinsights

bioLIVE league table ranks US top and China bottom

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Last modified: 8 May 2023

Amsterdam, 6 September 2018: bioLIVE – the new bioprocessing and manufacturing event running alongside this year’s CPhI Worldwide – today announces the initial findings of the world’s first ever biopharma league table, which evaluates the reputations of major bio manufacturing countries across a number of characteristics (scored 1-10). This follows the launch of the small molecule pharma league table introduced last year.

The provisional results indicate global industry executives and pharmaceutical companies perceived the United States as the top ranking nation for all major categories – ‘knowledge of professionals’ (8.2); ‘ability to meet future capacity’ (7.9); ‘bio innovation’ (8.0); ‘quality of processing’ (8.1) – and, perhaps more surprisingly, ‘growth potential’, ahead of emerging bio hubs in China, Ireland, and Singapore, as well as established rivals in the UK, Japan and Germany.

Most surprising are the results of China – a nation that has seen a well-documented surge in both innovative biotech start-ups and bioprocessing and manufacturing companies – whose reputation in biologics is still far behind the more established players. China scored below 6 for ‘bio innovation’ and ‘quality of biological manufacturing’ – bottom in both respective league tables – suggesting perception here may lag behind reality.

The full findings from 500 companies will be announced during bioLIVE in Madrid (October 9-11, 2018), with host nation Spain scoring just above 6 for all categories – significantly behind the other four major EU economies, as well as Ireland. In fact, recent training initiatives by Ireland’s NIBRT (National Institute for Bioprocessing Research) may be paying dividends as the country scored highly on ‘knowledge of bio professionals’ (7.2), and second only to Germany in terms of ‘growth potential’ (7.0) amongst EU countries.

Overall, when performance across all categories is analyzed, the USA (7.88), Germany (7.49) and Japan (7.46) again appear as tier one nations – mirroring the results in small molecule manufacturing – with Sweden (6.95) and the United Kingdom (6.91), ranking as the best of the rest.

The most notable difference between small and large molecule rankings was amongst the performance of mid to high ranking countries with Sweden (6.95), Singapore (6.54), and notably, South Korea (6.69) – home of a growing biopharma sector including Samsung Biologics – performing comparably to France (6.72), Spain (6.51), Italy (6.55) and Ireland (6.81) in terms of biologics. India (6.31) and China (6.29) were adrift at the foot of the table – however, given the larger number of Indian participants in the survey data, India would finish behind China, if Indian participants were excluded.

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De Facto Communications

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