試す 金 - 無料
Indian biotech needs to lose its handcuffs
Hindustan Times Mumbai
|October 06, 2025
From regulatory reforms to rewarding research and discoveries instead of patient volumes treated at hospitals, the existing ecosystem needs many changes to be future-ready
Every headline about Donald Trump's tariffs sounds like another disaster for India. Yet this time, the blow landed softer than feared. His 100% duties fall on branded drugs, sparing India's generic exports - the foundation of its pharmaceutical trade. That is the silver lining. The darker truth is that India was even holding its breath. An industry that should be shaping the future was instead bracing for Washington's next move. That is the real vulnerability.
Trump's action shows how fragile India's position is when it leans too heavily on the past - on its role as the world's low-cost pharmacy. The future of medicine is being written in biotechnology and Artificial Intelligence (AI), and those who master it will define global health care. India has the talent, the patients, and the history to lead. What it lacks is the urgency to break free from the bureaucracy and inertia that keep it chained.
China understood this long ago. It has built entire biotech cities like Wuxi, where molecules move from discovery to trials to production in months. Clinical trials that take years in the West are approved there in weeks. Behind it all is a national priority backed by billions in State funding, fast-track regulation, and a vast patient base. Confronting that juggernaut would be risky, so Trump avoids it. Instead, he turns his fire to India, where it is politically safer.
このストーリーは、Hindustan Times Mumbai の October 06, 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Hindustan Times Mumbai からのその他のストーリー
Hindustan Times Mumbai
Tusk master
He grew up rescuing parakeets, snakes and monkeys. Started his first NGO at 19, to save the Delhi Ridge from being turned into a rose garden. To peers, he's 'the elephant guy', for the years he spent undercover, tracking illegal trade. Menon is now the first Asian to head IUCN's Species Survival Commission, which shapes the pivotal global Red List of Endangered Species. 'There should be a lot more species on that list. We need to move fast,' he says
4 mins
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times Mumbai
Jonita on opening for Enrique: It felt surreal
Singer and performer Jonita Gandhi is still soaking in what she calls an “incredible” year, one that saw her collaborate with English singer Ed Sheeran and, most recently, open for Spanish heartthrob Enrique Iglesias during his concerts in Mumbai this week.
1 min
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times Mumbai
Capital grain: We're paying more than we realise, for rice
TOO MUCH OF A GOOD THING?
6 mins
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times Mumbai
U.S. NOT SENDING SENIOR OFFICIALS TO COP30 MEET
The United States will not send any top officials to the Cop30 climate talks in Brazil later this month, a White House official said Saturday, as President Donald Trump instead works to boost fossil fuels.
1 min
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times Mumbai
Mass killings in Sudan still on
Satellite imagery suggests mass killings are likely continuing in and around Sudan's El-Fasher, researchers said, as Germany's top diplomat on Saturday described the situation there as “apocalyptic”.
1 min
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times Mumbai
Where is all your money going?
The official inflation numbers don't currently match the rate you experience - at the grocery store, the hospital, the child's school. Why does this happen, and how bad is it? What can you do to safeguard against the erosion of earnings, savings and household budgets? Kashyap Kompella explores personal inflation
5 mins
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times Mumbai
When numbers lose all meaning
We hear the word “inflation” and think of prices (of food, fuel, medication, rent). But inflation’s reach goes far beyond markets, and can seep into how we measure worth itself.
2 mins
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times Mumbai
WHY IT IS SUDDENLY 'EMBARRASSING' TO HAVE A BOYFRIEND
From Lily Allen's breakup album to viral memes, Gen Z women are rebranding singlehood as self-preservation and the internet can't stop talking about it
2 mins
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times Mumbai
Said sorry to Trump for Reagan ad, says Canada’s PM Carney
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said on Saturday he had apologised to US President Donald Trump over an anti-tariff political advertisement and had told Ontario Premier Doug Ford not torunit, Reuters reported.
1 min
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times Mumbai
This Paresh Rawal starrer takes on a monumental topic, but forgets to keep you engaged
Actor Paresh Rawal plays an Agra tour guide in The Taj Story, and at one point, he answers the question already on every viewer's mind: why are we suddenly revisiting the Taj Mahal’s history? Why now? He calls it a “desh ka mudda” apparently not raised often enough.
1 mins
November 02, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
