Shuli Ren, Columnist

Think Drugs Are Expensive in the U.S.? Just Try China

Beijing will want pharma companies to share the pain of the country’s growing healthcare costs.

Pill popping.

Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg
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For a country whose GDP per capita is only 15 percent that of the U.S., consumers in China are paying remarkably high drug prices.

The U.S. isn’t famed for its low-cost pharmaceuticals — but prices of generics are on average only 55 percent of those in China, according to a recent Credit Suisse Group AG report. For instance, Jiangsu Hengrui Medicine Co.’s Docetaxel, a chemotherapy medication that treats a number of cancers, costs one-third less in the U.S. Or consider Levamlodipine, a cardiovascular drug. If CSPC Pharmaceutical Group Ltd. charged prices similar to those prevailing in the U.S., it would see 5 percent of its annual revenue gone.