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After pandemic, U.S. senators want review of drug supply
chain
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[June 30, 2020]
By Patricia Zengerle
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican and
Democratic U.S. senators called for a government analysis of foreign
influence in the U.S. pharmaceutical supply chain on Tuesday, saying the
coronavirus pandemic has exposed an over-reliance on China and other
countries for the production of essential drugs.
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Republican Senator Marco Rubio and Democratic Senator Elizabeth
Warren will introduce the U.S. Pharmaceutical Supply Chain Review
Act on Tuesday.
The bill would require the government to study the effects of
relying on foreign companies and foreign investment for the
production of pharmaceuticals for the U.S. market, and provide a
report within one year, according to a copy of the legislation seen
by Reuters.
"To defeat the current COVID-19 crisis and better equip the United
States against future pandemics, we must take control of our supply
chain and rely less on foreign countries for our critical drugs,"
Warren said in a statement.
China is one of the countries that invests in U.S. drug companies,
but the senators are also interested in getting a view of all
foreign investment in the U.S. pharmaceutical industry, an aide
said.
Republican President Donald Trump has long pledged to bring U.S.
manufacturing back from overseas, but the coronavirus and concern
about dependence on imports, particularly from China, has spurred a
flurry of new activity.
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China overtook the United States as the world's top manufacturing country in
2010 and was responsible for 28% of global output in 2018, according to United
Nations data.
Rubio, a leading congressional proponent of tougher China policy, said the
report required by the bill would provide information necessary to address
supply chain vulnerabilities and reduce overreliance on China for
pharmaceuticals.
The bill would require the Federal Trade Commission and the Secretary of the
Treasury, acting through the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United
States (CFIUS), to conduct the study.
(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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