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BioForward 2014 Bioscience Vision Summit. George Goodno Communications Director for State Policy, International Affairs and Intellectual Property. October 8, 2014. Biotechnology Industry Organization. Biotechnology companies Academic institutions State biotechnology centers
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BioForward2014 Bioscience Vision Summit George GoodnoCommunications Director for State Policy, International Affairs and Intellectual Property October 8, 2014
Biotechnology Industry Organization • Biotechnology companies • Academic institutions • State biotechnology centers • Related organizations Over 1000 Members across US and more than 30 other nationsinvolved in research and development of technologies in: • Healthcare • Agriculture • Industry and Environment
Heal, Fuel, Feed the World Food & Agriculture Industrial & Environmental Health & Medical
Defining the Bioscience Industry: 5 Major Subsectors Reflect the Breadth of Bioscience Opportunities
*Battelle/BIO State Bioscience Industry Development 2014 Bioscience Industry: A Signature Performer for the U.S. Relative to Other Technology Sectors
*Battelle/BIO State Bioscience Industry Development 2014 Since the Recession, Biosciences Job Growth Mixed, But Economic Activity Continues to Rise
*Battelle/BIO State Bioscience Industry Development 2014 Broad National Footprint with Widely Shared Growth Across Many of the States Change in Bioscience Employment by State, 2007–2012 • 28 states had overall bioscience industry job gains from 2007-2012 • Only 12 states had significant job losses of 1,000 or more
Bioscience Industry a Source of High-Wage Jobs • Average wages for Bioscience industry workers $88,000 in 2012 • Bioscience wages were nearly $40,000 more, or 80% greater than for the average private sector worker • Bioscience wages have grown at a much higher rate vs. private sector; inflation-adjusted Bioscience wages up 15% since 2001 vs. 5% for private sector
Broader Impacts of the U.S. Bioscience Industry • Each bioscience job generates an additional 3.9 jobs due to purchasing goods and services from other industries and spending of employees • The 1.62 million direct jobs translates into a total economic impact of 7.86 million jobs
A Growing Engine of Innovation—Patent Activity in the Biosciences
Signs of Stress? Bioscience VC Investments Down U.S. Bioscience Venture Capital Investments, 2009-2013 ($ Millions)
Signs of Stress? NIH Funding More Challenging National Institutes of Health Funding, 2009–2013 ($ Billions)
*Battelle/BIO State Bioscience Industry Development 2014 While Impacted by the Great Recession, Bioscience Industry Weathered it Far Better than Overall Private Sector Industries Trends in U.S. Bioscience and Private Sector Employment, 2001–2012 (Indexed: 2001=100)
Wisconsin’s Bioscience Industry Continues to Expand 2012: 31,758Total Jobs *Battelle/BIO State Bioscience Industry Development 2014
Nice Chart… But Doesn’t Tell the Whole Jobs Story • Since 2007, over 10% growth in jobs in Medical Device and Diagnostic Companies • Over 21% growth in jobs in Drugs and Pharmaceuticals • Over 20% growth in Research and Testing jobs • Below average in Distribution and Ag biotech
Wisconsin’s Bioscience Employment Total Bioscience Industry Employment: 31,758 Direct-Effect Employment Multiplier: 4.7 Total Employment Impact: 148,833 Average Annual Wage (2010 dollars) $72,604 Medical Devices & Equipment: 10,912 Bioscience-Related Distribution:10,296 Research, Testing, & Medical Laboratories:5,132 Agricultural Feedstock & Chemicals: 1,316 Drugs & Pharmaceuticals: 4,103
Deeper Dive • Milwaukee: • Largest bio industry across the metros, 13,365 jobs • 2 specialized industry concentrations: • Medical Devices (6,745 jobs) • Bio-related Distribution (3,600 jobs) • Madison: • Large, impressively varied, 7,748 jobs • Highly specialized/concentrated region • One of only 8 US metros with a specialized employment base in 4 of 5 bio subsectors and the 5th is just under the specialization threshold • Sheboygan: 439 med device jobs Racine: 254 med device jobs • Janesville: 294 Bio-related distribution jobs
Wisconsin Universities are Focused in the Biosciences • $934 million in bioscience academic R&D in 2012 • 70% of all academic research • 61% is the national average State inventors have been issued 3,048 bioscience related patents since 2009
Positioned for the Future • As industry changes the future is in discovery and development partnerships. • Partnerships with Universities and emerging companies are critical for larger company success. • Your strategy fits nicely with the new model and should accelerate job growth and investment in Wisconsin
Looking Ahead • Importance of biosciences as an economic driver continues with a bright future in helping to “feed, fuel and heal the world” • But the growth of the biosciences depends upon innovation and its future success cannot be taken for granted • Enlightened state development approaches and national policies have made an important difference in growing the biosciences in the U.S. and will continue to be important for the future in creating a high-quality business environment for biosciences industry to grow
BioForward Thank You!!