Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
Indian biotech needs to lose its handcuffs
Hindustan Times Amritsar
|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.
Bu hikaye Hindustan Times Amritsar dergisinin October 06, 2025 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
Hindustan Times Amritsar'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
Hindustan Times Amritsar
Google Pay eyes credit ecosystem beyond payments
Google Pay has been distributing personal loans on behalf of its lending partners for several years and has now expanded its product suite to include credit cards.
2 mins
December 18, 2025
Hindustan Times Amritsar
Cram school: The benefit factor in a chess league
For some GMs, the Global Chess League can also double up as an idea factory
3 mins
December 18, 2025
Hindustan Times Amritsar
Father at 15: Draft roll data reveals oddities
More than a million voters in West Bengal were born when their parents were less than 15 years of age, data shared by the Election Commission has revealed.
2 mins
December 18, 2025
Hindustan Times Amritsar
US official: Tariff row not why India is excluded from Pax Silica
Top US official Jacob Helberg denied claims that India had been excluded from Washington's new Pax Silica technology grouping due to broader tensions in the US-India relationship.
1 mins
December 18, 2025
Hindustan Times Amritsar
HC rejects plea seeking higher compensation
{ INDIGO CRISIS
1 mins
December 18, 2025
Hindustan Times Amritsar
Gunman charged with 59 offences including murder
Australian authorities charged the surviving gunman in Sydney Hanukkah attack that killed 15 with 59 offences, including murder and terrorism, Bloomberg reported.
2 mins
December 18, 2025
Hindustan Times Amritsar
Snicko reprieve for ton-up Carey in Adelaide Test
The operator of the Snicko technology being used in the Ashes has admitted an error led to a reprieve for Australia’s Alex Carey on the first day of the third Test in Adelaide on Wednesday.
2 mins
December 18, 2025
Hindustan Times Amritsar
Diamonds in the rough: How IPL is changing fabric of our cricket
The number of uncapped players picked up in the auction and money spent is steadily rising as franchise scouting programmes gain currency
3 mins
December 18, 2025
Hindustan Times Amritsar
Gill under injury cloud as fog rules out Lucknow T20I
Shubman Gill's batting form has been the most talking point in the T20 series against South Africa with the opener scoring just 32 runs in first three matches.
1 mins
December 18, 2025
Hindustan Times Amritsar
Global South's rise not against anybody: Modi
The Global South's rise is not aimed against anyone and envisages a world with access to technology, respect for sovereignty, shared prosperity and a global governance structure that reflects contemporary reality, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Wednesday while addressing a joint session of Ethiopia's Parliament.
1 min
December 18, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
