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New blockbuster products
-- those with sales topping $1 billion a year -- will only be able to replace some of the revenue prescription drug companies will lose, he said. To compensate, big drugmakers increasingly are targeting emerging markets, countries with big populations and a growing middle class now spending more on health care. As a result, IMS projects average annual sales growth of 13 percent to 16 percent through 2013 in the top emerging markets: China plus Brazil, Russia, Mexico, India, Turkey and South Korea. Aitken noted the U.S. forecast is up by a percentage point from what IMS expected as recently as April. "Near-term growth prospects in the U.S. have strengthened in recent months," he said. Aitken cited factors including pharmacies no longer reducing their medication inventory, drugmakers continuing to increase prices 5 percent a year on average despite the recession, and the companies helping poor and uninsured patients continue buying their medicines by expanding assistance programs that cover part of the cost.
[Associated
Press;
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