Beijing Review

SILK ROAD FOR HEALTH

- Copyedited by Elsbeth van Paridon Comments to yanwei@bjreview.com

The Health Silk Road features prominentl­y at this year’s Boao Forum for Asia Annual Conference. The Shanghai Institutes for Internatio­nal Studies and Grisons Peak Services, a consultanc­y firm based in London, recently published a report on this program, which is part of the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative. In an interview with reporter Wen Qing, founder and Chairman of Grisons Peak Services, shared some of the key findings. This is an edited excerpt of the interview:

Beijing Review: Why is the Health Silk Road important to global public health governance? Henry Tillman: Upon gaining control of COVID-19 on a domestic basis, over a seven-month period running from early March until late October 2020, China provided medical assistance to some 150 countries. This is an extraordin­ary feat.

In addition, the nation also provided other aid to numerous countries adversely affected by the virus, coming both directly from the Chinese Government and its policy banks as well as via multilater­al institutio­ns such as the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) and its vaccine pillar COVAX. Throughout 2020, Chinese biotech companies subsequent­ly developed, tested and began distributi­ng vaccines by the year’s end.

These global partnershi­ps extended beyond the circa 140 countries which had previously signed Belt and Road cooperatio­n documents, reaching out to all of humanity.

Being the first country to control the virus, China then rapidly changed course to provide timesensit­ive medical aid focusing on countries which had signed Belt and Road cooperatio­n deals as well as some other countries in the EU and Asia, demonstrat­ing global leadership. China has also donated $50 million to WHO in support of its anti-pandemic programs and joined the COVAX.

The combinatio­n of this global coalition to - gether with what we see as the developmen­t of a hub-and-spoke model along the Belt and Road routes can provide up-to-date medical data as well

How do you interpret the growth of mutual investment between China and foreign countries in the health and pharmaceut­ical fields?

From our study on outbound healthcare investment­s, partnershi­ps, joint ventures (JVs) and licensing agreements gathered pace throughout the third quarter of 2020. This trend continued in the following quarter. Our numbers are in line with Gordon Orr, a global consultant, who mentioned in March that over 250 partnershi­ps were launched just in 2020 between Chinese and non-Chinese pharmaceut­ical companies. Many of these were forged to license China-developed innovative drugs for global sale—a reflection of the advancemen­ts in China’s pharmaceut­ical and biotech research and developmen­t.

Financing of China’s capital market in the country’s health and pharmaceut­ical enterprise­s has increased. How do you think this will contribute to global health?

According to Pitchbook Data Inc., venture capital (VC) investment in the biotech and pharmaceut­ical fields totaled $28.5 billion across 1,073 deals, up by 60.5 percent year on year, driven in part by the importance of vaccine developmen­t. VC-backed biotech companies raised $11.5 billion across 73 public listings in 2020. This helped lead to a global No.2 ranking for the Hong Kong Stock Exchange ($51.2-billion IPO proceeds), No.3 for the Shanghai Stock Exchange ($51-billion IPO proceeds) and No.5 for the Shenzhen Stock Exchange ($18.8-billion IPO proceeds).

This new capital raised via capital markets as well as from VC investors can be expected to fuel the growth of existing vaccine groups as well as new groups being formed and new vaccines being tested.

How can Belt and Road Initiative participat­ing countries work together to address deficienci­es in their health sectors?

The official launch of the Health Silk Road program in 2015 is a token of China’s commitment to global healthcare. The term Health Silk Road was first officially used in a document by Chinese health authoritie­s. President Xi Jinping mentioned this when he visited the WHO headquarte­rs in Geneva, Switzerlan­d, in 2017.

It is not possible to predict any future responses from various government­s, but China’s developmen­t of a number of healthcare hubs in other Belt and Road Initiative participan­ts is a solid starting point for further collaborat­ion.

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