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THE FUTURE OF LIFE SCIENCES IN NEW JERSEY: PUBLIC POLICY CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES . ISPE NJ Supplier Showcase 2013 September 12, 2013 Dean J. Paranicas President and Chief Executive Officer HealthCare Institute of New Jersey. WHAT IS HINJ?.
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THE FUTURE OF LIFE SCIENCES IN NEW JERSEY: PUBLIC POLICY CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES ISPE NJ Supplier Showcase 2013 September 12, 2013 Dean J. Paranicas President and Chief Executive Officer HealthCare Institute of New Jersey
WHAT IS HINJ? NJ-based trade association for research-based life sciences companies 25 members, including many of the world’s largest biopharmaceutical and medical technology companies HINJ • Represents the life sciences in Washington and Trenton • Advocacy organization promoting patient access, • innovation and industry-NJ economic synergy
WHAT IS HINJ? Working together with labor leaders and elected officials to pursue policies that protect patients around the world while PROTECTING JOBS HEREIN NEW JERSEY WWW.HINJ.ORG
TODAY’S PRESENTATION • Industry’s economic impact on NJ • Business model and market forces • A competitive playing field • Need for a vibrant “Innovation Ecosystem”
LIFE SCIENCES IN NEW JERSEY “MEDICINE CHEST OF THE WORLD” • NJ/NY one of nation’s largest life sciences clusters • Life sciences is NJ’s largest industry sector • 13 of world’s top 20 biopharmaceutical companies • 11 of world’s top 20 medical technology companies • Industry nerve center global, North American or US HQ’s or significant presence
DRIVING NEW JERSEY’S ECONOMY • NEW JERSEY’S LIFE SCIENCES • $24.2 billion economic impact* • 51,000+ full-time employees* • 60,000 indirect jobs* • $8.4 billion in R&D spending* • $8.1 billion in purchasing from NJ vendors** • $700 million in capital construction* • $161 million in contributions to NJ charities* • $961 million in taxes and rebates paid in NJ* • 501 biopharma products in development* • 79 med tech new product applications* • * Source: 2011 HINJ Economic Impact Report • ** Source: We Work for Health 2012
DRIVING NEW JERSEY’S ECONOMY Why New Jersey? • Opportunities to collaborate with each other • Most talented life sciences workforce in the world • Multiple research universities • Access to capital markets • Transportation hub: world-class airport, ports, surface transportation • Comprehensive and specialized vendor support • Communities of interest • Quality of life
DRIVING NEW JERSEY’S ECONOMY – LIFE SCIENCES VENDORS www.njlifesciencevendoralliance.org • More than 5,000 vendors located throughout NJ • Represent 60,000 spin-off jobs in NJ* • Purchase more than $8.1 billion worth of goods and services annually** • Organized into New Jersey Life Sciences Vendors Alliance (NJLSVA) – Approximately 700 members * Source: 2011 HINJ Economic Impact Report ** Source: We Work for Health 2012
MARKETPLACE DYNAMICS 75% of health-care spending for chronic disease Medicine represents 10.1% of the cost of health care 84%of all prescriptions are for generics medications Medication non-adherence costs $300 billion per year
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT • $50 billion spent on R&D IN 2011 • $8.4 billion spent in NJ • 5/5,000 compounds enter a clinical trial • ONLY 1/5 approved for market • 10-15 years and $1.5 billion to develop and commercialize drugs • Patent clock starts from compound discovery
“NEW REALITY” INDUSTRY DRIVERS • Evolving industry business model • Financial constraints • Consolidation • Changing dynamics • New Jersey’s continued visibility as a life sciences leader • Increasing competition for industry investment • Volatile political environment • Perception of industry as a “cash cow” • Plug federal budget gaps • Absorb revenue reductions
THE INDUSTRY’S FUTURE Key National Issues Sequestration MedicarePart D Rebates IPAB Importation ACA Implementation FDA
SUSTAINING NEW JERSEY’S LEADERSHIP • Intense competition from other states/countries for life sciences investment (a highly coveted industry) Where will the industry invest its next dollar(s)? • New Jersey? California? Massachusetts? North Carolina? Ireland? Singapore?
SUSTAINING NEW JERSEY’S LEADERSHIP HINJ works closely with NJ’s federal and state lawmakers to ensure an attractive US and NJ investment climate Adverse impacts on life sciences disproportionately affect NJ due to industry concentration (e.g., Medicare Part D rebates, medical device tax)
SUSTAINING NEW JERSEY’S LEADERSHIP Building New Jersey’s “Innovation Ecosystem”
SUSTAINING NEW JERSEY’S LEADERSHIP “Innovation Ecosystem” * Source: Jones Lang LaSalle “Life Sciences Cluster Report,” 2011
RESTRUCTURING NEW JERSEY HEALTH SCIENCES EDUCATION Why is Restructuring New Jersey Health Sciences Education Important? “New Jersey must develop a structure to foster better collaboration between its businesses and its institutions of higher education. With better cross-pollination between public and private research, New Jersey’s economy could launch more creative entrepreneurship and more beneficial commercialization.” ─Report of the Governor’s Task Force on Higher Education-Dec. 2010
Cancer Institute of New Jersey • Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences • New Jersey Medical School • Rutgers School of Dental Medicine (formerly New Jersey Dental School) • School of Health Related Professions • School of Nursing • School of Public Health • University Behavioral Health Care • Robert Wood Johnson Medical RESTRUCTURING NEW JERSEY HEALTH SCIENCES EDUCATION WHAT’S INVOLVED? • From UMDNJ • Rutgers Biomedical and Health Sciences • College of Nursing • Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy • Institute for Health, Health Care Policy and Aging Research • From Rutgers
RESTRUCTURING NEW JERSEY HEALTH SCIENCES EDUCATION IMPLICATIONS FOR NEW JERSEY CHALLENGES OPPORTUNITIES • Rutgers’ attractiveness as a partner • Convincing companies to choose Rutgers • Integration hurdles • Enhanced competitiveness • Jobs and economic growth • More innovative new products