The U.S. economy may have fallen off a cliff last year, but drug R&D spending continued to surge upwards. A new survey on R&D reveals that research spending by U.S. biopharma companies jumped to $65.2 billion last year, an increase of $2 billion over the year before, according to analysis by Burrill & Co. and PhRMA.
PhRMA put its usual spin on the economic development numbers, citing the jobs and investments devoted to the search for a cure to what ails us. In a separate study, PhRMA found 686,000 direct employees of the sector engaged in life, physical or social sciences research in 2006.
"Our research indicates that the biopharmaceutical sector has made a substantial contribution to U.S. economic growth, and that on average, this sector contributed more to GDP on a per employee basis and grew faster than the rest of the economy from 1996 to 2006," said Michael Eckstut of Archstone Consulting.
- check out the release [1]
Related Articles:
Crisis forces biotechs to cut R&D, preserve cash [2]
U.S., Europe still lead in global R&D efforts [3]
U.S. R&D headcount tumbles in key categories [4]
Links:
[1] http://www.fiercebiotech.com/press-releases/r-d-spending-u-s-biopharmaceutical-companies-reaches-record-levels-2008-despite-econo
[2] http://www.fiercebiotech.com/story/crisis-forces-biotechs-cut-r-d-preserve-cash/2008-10-29
[3] http://www.fiercebioresearcher.com/story/u-s-europe-still-lead-global-r-d-efforts/2008-10-21
[4] http://www.fiercebiotech.com/story/u.s.-rd-headcount-tumbles-in-key-categories/2008-04-09