Chinese Drugmakers Shrug Off Broad U.S. Pharmaceutical Tariffs
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Chinese pharmaceutical makers are positioned to comfortably evade a sweeping new 100% U.S. tariff on patented drugs, insulated by their reliance on exporting raw materials and a booming strategy of licensing domestic drug rights to overseas partners.
The long-brewing U.S. barrier on pharmaceutical imports has officially landed. In a fact sheet released April 2, the White House announced that Donald Trump is authorizing a 100% tariff on patented drugs and their underlying components. The aggressive levies will go into effect in 120 days for large enterprises, while small and medium-sized businesses have a 180-day grace period. Patented drugs typically encompass original brand-name therapeutics and their modified iterations.
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- US imposes 100% tariff on patented drugs/components (120/180-day grace periods); Chinese firms evade via API exports and $135.65B out-licensing deals.
- Exemptions: 15% for EU/Japan/SK/Switzerland/Liechtenstein/UK; 0% till 2029 for local manufacturing + MFN pricing.
- Rationale: Section 232 finds national security threat; 53% patented drugs imported, APIs only 15% domestic.
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