The price of hesitation – POLITICO

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But the warning signs are clear: while Europe still accounts for 20​​ percent​​​​ of global pharmaceutical ​​research and development​​​​​​, its share of global investment is shrinking as capital and talent migrate​​ elsewhere​.​4​​ Europe’s world-class science is being held back by fragmentation and regulatory inertia.

We must treat this sector as a pillar of our sovereignty and a strategic asset, not merely a cost to be managed.

If we want to lead the next wave of medical breakthroughs, we must move at the speed of global change. This requires a fundamental shift: simplifying clinical trial regulations, deploying AI-driven digital tools, incentivizing research through strong ​​intellectual property ​​​​​​frameworks​​ and establishing a public-private dialogue on innovative pharmaceuticals.

We need a clear action plan, not just more legislation, to translate our scientific leadership into tangible health outcomes. ​​We must treat this sector as a pillar of our sovereignty and a strategic asset, not merely a cost to be managed. 

​​c​​​onsequential ​​c​​​hoice 

Europe has to choose. Either we can continue to approach life science innovation as a budgetary threat, only to reali​​z​​​​e too late that we have weakened our competitiveness and delayed new treatments for patients. Or we can recogni​​z​​​​e innovation for what it is ​​—​​​​ an economic multiplier that strengthens our productivity, resilience​​ and global influence ​​—​​​​ and ensure that Europe remains a place where the next generation of medical breakthroughs is discovered, developed​​ and delivered to patients. 

There is no middle ground. Europe must stop focus​​ing solely on the cost of innovation and start asking how much innovation it can afford to lose. In the global race for talent and capital, hesitation is a decision. The rest of the world is not waiting.