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US pharma giant Eli Lilly is very unhappy with Germany; CEO calls its planned healthcare reform: Terrible signal to ...

US pharma giant Eli Lilly is very unhappy with Germany; CEO calls its planned healthcare reform: Terrible signal to ...
US pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly has announced that it is halving its massive €2.3 billion ($2.67 billion) investment plan to build a high-tech manufacturing plant in Alzey, Rhineland-Palatinate in what can be seen a major blow to Germany’s industrial ambitions. The rollback targets a facility originally designed to be one of Eli Lilly’s largest and most modern factories worldwide, intended to produce its highly sought-after weight-loss and diabetes injection, Mounjaro.Eli Lilly CEO Dave Ricks criticised Germany’s newly proposed cost-cutting healthcare legislation, calling the planned reform a “terrible signal to the industry.” While talking to local newspaper Handelsblatt (via news agency Reuters), Ricks issued a warning to lawmakers, declaring, “Germany will fall to last place in European markets in terms of supporting our industry.”

Mass exodus of pharmaceutical capital

The friction stems from a newly announced cost-cutting law put forward by German Health Minister Nina Warken. The legislation aims to cap rapidly mounting expenditures within Germany’s statutory health insurance system by forcing pharmaceutical firms into higher discounts and restrictive new price framework agreements.The financial backlash from the industry has been swift and severe, with Eli Lilly pulling over a billion euros off the table, and redirecting those funds either to Pennsylvania in the US or to a completely new international site.
Similarly, Boehringer Ingelheim, a major German domestic pharmaceutical manufacturer, announced it is canceling over €900 million in planned local investments as it opposes the government’s cost-cutting plans.According to Ricks, the legislative framework devalues the pharmaceutical sector, making alternative markets far more attractive. “Europe isn't completely off the table, but the US makes the most sense,” Ricks noted regarding where the scrapped capital will now be deployed.

Reduced factory output and halved jobs

While Eli Lilly has already poured more than a billion euros into the Alzey production site, the factory will no longer realise its full potential.The high-tech facility is still technically on track to begin its manufacturing operations in 2027. However, due to the slashed budget, the plant will launch at a heavily reduced operational capacity. Furthermore, the company expects to cut its original hiring goal in half, bringing the projected workforce down from 1,000 planned jobs to just 500.

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