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Policy

Annual Report 2025

The things that help the patients of today are crucial to the future of Switzerland as a pharmaceutical location. The Annual Report 2025 shows how medical advances, security of supply and economic strength are connected – and the direction that politics now needs to take.

Switzerlands’s Choice: A Pharma Hub at a Crossroads

For decades, Switzerland has been one of the world’s leading locations for pharmaceutical research, innovation and production. Medicines developed here save lives – in Switzerland and far beyond. The research-based pharmaceutical industry is therefore not only a central pillar of our healthcare system, but also a decisive factor for prosperity, high-quality jobs and the international competitiveness of our country. Few other sectors have had such a lasting impact on Switzerland’s economy and society.

Editorial

Interpharma President Jörg-Michael Rupp (left) and Managing Director Dr René P. Buholzer in the editorial of the annual report on the importance of research, innovation and a reliable regulatory framework for Switzerland as a pharmaceutical hub.

Its economic importance is impressive: every Swiss franc of revenue generated by the pharmaceutical industry creates around CHF 3.20 in added value for Switzerland – through taxes and investment. In total, the sector contributes up to CHF 10 billion to public revenues every year and secures around 50,000 jobs directly and around 250,000 indirectly. At the same time, the medical benefits are clear: since 1990, innovative medicines have reduced mortality by almost a third, saved around two million days in hospital each year, and thus also helped to curb healthcare expenditure.

But this success story is not a given. The international environment is changing rapidly. Geopolitical tensions and new regulatory requirements are intensifying global competition between locations. In major markets such as the United States and China, large-scale investment in research, development and production within those countries is now a prerequisite for market access. For small, open economies such as Switzerland, this increases the competitive pressure noticeably. In addition, health policy developments are exacerbating the situation. In particular, the “most-favoured-nation” regime in the US is having far-reaching consequences: if US prices are increasingly linked to those in Switzerland and other European countries, low Swiss prices, which are adjusted for purchasing power, will have a direct impact on the world’s most important pharma-ceutical market. The consequences are foreseeable – and problematic: new medicines could be introduced in Switzerland with a delay, or only at significantly higher prices or, in the worst case, not at all. Research, clinical trials and skilled jobs are at risk of relocating abroad.

Strengthening Switzerland as a business location

This development is not an abstract issue of the future: it is already a reality. Access to innovative therapies has been demonstrably worsening for some time: Switzerland is now only seventh in Europe and offers patients only around half of the new medicines that are available in Germany. This increases the risk that we in Switzerland will no longer benefit from medical progress at the same pace as our neighbouring countries. However, a reliable and timely supply of innovative medicines is not a luxury, but a crucial component of an efficient healthcare system – and a critical benchmark for the quality of medical care.

Against this backdrop, a fundamental question arises: which path does Switzerland want to take? Will the focus remain primarily on short-term cost containment, or will we create an environment that enables targeted investment, introduces modern pricing processes adjusted for purchasing power, and strengthens innovation-friendly framework conditions?

The answer to this question will determine whether Switzerland can maintain its position as a leading global hub for life sciences – and whether patients will continue to have early access to medical innovations in the future. We are convinced that, with constructive cooperation between all stakeholders and a shared determination to find solutions, Switzerland can overcome this challenge and continue its success story.

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The things that help the patients of today are crucial to the future of Switzerland as a pharmaceutical location. The Annual Report 2025 shows how medical advances, security of supply and economic strength are connected – and the direction that politics now needs to take.