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Biopharmaceutical innovation and industrial developments in South Korea, Singapore and Taiwan.

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TLDR
It is argued that the most important feature of the biopharmaceutical industry in these countries is the dominant role of the public sector, as illustrated by input measures such as R&D expenditure as share of gross domestic product, number of patents granted and clinical trials, and volume of foreign direct investment.
Abstract
South Korea, Singapore and Taiwan are well known as export-oriented developmental states which for decades employed industrial policy to target particular industries for government support. In the past fifteen years, these three countries all identified the biopharmaceutical industry as a strategic sector. This article explores, through economic analysis, the rationale for this decision and the strategies chosen for linking into the global bio-economy with the objective of catching up in biopharmaceuticals. The paper identifies three comparative advantages enjoyed by these countries in the biopharma sector: (1) public investments in basic research; (2) private investments in phase 1 clinical trials; and (3) a potentially significant contract research industry managing latter-stage clinical trials. Governments employ a range of industrial policies, consistent with these comparative advantages, to promote the biopharmaceutical industry, including public investment in biomedical hubs, research funding and research and development (R&D) tax credits. We argue that the most important feature of the biopharmaceutical industry in these countries is the dominant role of the public sector. That these countries have made progress in innovative capabilities is illustrated by input measures such as R&D expenditure as share of gross domestic product, number of patents granted and clinical trials, and volume of foreign direct investment. In contrast, output indicators such as approval of new chemical entities suggest that the process of catching up has only just commenced. Pharmaceutical innovation is at the stage of mainly generating inputs to integrated processes controlled by the globally incumbent firms.

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TL;DR: Evidence is found that the profit-seeking behavior of the medical providers in the prescription drug market transfers the force of competition from the unregulated wholesale market to the regulated retail market and hence market competition still plays an important role in the determination of the regulated price.
Dissertation

Latecomers' science-based catch-up in transition : the case of the Korean pharmaceutical industry

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the 25-year transitional process of the Korean pharmaceutical industry from its initial focus on the imitative production of generic drugs to the development of new drugs and argued that the rate of change in the transition from imitating drugs to developing new drugs depends on the institutional and organisational mechanisms that enable a new form of technological learning, termed explororatory learning.
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Determinants of biopharmaceutical R&D expenditures in China: the impact of spatiotemporal context.

TL;DR: Based on an examination on the research and development (R&D) expenditures of 284 listed biopharmaceutical companies in China, Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper found that the innovation space of the biopharma industry presents a spatial “North-South” pattern.
References
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MonographDOI

Governing the market: economic theory and the role of government in East Asian industrialization

Robert Hunter Wade
- 01 Jan 1990 - 
TL;DR: Wade's Governing the market quickly established itself as a standard in contemporary political economy as discussed by the authors, and the synergy between markets and public administration and the way allocation decisions were divided between markets, public administration, and corporations was examined.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Logic of the Developmental State@@@Asia's Next Giant: South Korea and Late Industrialization@@@The Political Economy of the New Asian Industrialism@@@MITI and the Japanese Miracle@@@Governing the Market: Economic Theory and the Role of Government in East Asian Industrialization

TL;DR: Wade as mentioned in this paper reviewed the debate about industrial policy in East and Southeast Asia and chronicles the changing fortunes of these economies over the 1990s, and extended the original argument to explain the boom of the first half of the decade and the crash of the second, stressing the links between corporations, banks, governments, international capital markets and the International Monetary Fund.
Journal ArticleDOI

Asia's next giant : South Korea and late industrialization

Alice H. Amsden
- 01 Jan 1990 - 
TL;DR: Korea's mode of industrialization as mentioned in this paper, the state and business: history and policies A history of backwardness The ABCs of Japanese and Korean accumulation The growth dynamic The spiraling of market power Getting relative prices "wrong": A summary Part II: Salaried management and human resources: The rise of salaried managers: Automobile manufacturing The paradox of "unlimited" labor and rising wages The boom in education Part III: The dynamics of dynamic comparative advantage: The switch in industrial leadership The world's largest shipbuilder The triumph of steel
Posted Content

Asia's Next Giant: South Korea and Late Industrialization

TL;DR: Amsden as mentioned in this paper showed that South Korea is one of a series of countries (ranging from Taiwan, India, Brazil, and Turkey, to Mexico, and including Japan) to have succeeded through borrowing foreign technology rather than by generating new products or processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Absorptive Capacity, Coauthoring Behavior, and the Organization of Research in Drug Discovery

TL;DR: The authors examine the interface between for-profit and publicly funded pharmaceuticals, finding that 'Connectedness' is significantly correlated with firms' internal organization, as well as their performance in drug discovery.
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