How Taiwan Can Be A Biomedical Hub

Biomedicine is a priority sector for Taiwan. The government has goals to establish Taiwan as the capital of biomedical research and development in the Asia-Pacific region. The country is striving to develop 20 new medicines, bring 80 high-value medical devices to market, and build biomedicine into a trillion-NT-dollar industry by 2025. Tax incentives and other credits will help expand the scale of the biotech and pharmaceutical industry.  

Taiwan
• Source: Shutterstock

Taiwan’s economy ranks 21st in the world, having a gross domestic product valued at $841bn. The annual total output value of the Taiwanese pharmaceutical industry has continued this trend of growth, increasing by 4.1% to NT$82.12bn ($2.6bn) in 2021. The key segments in the Taiwan pharmaceutical market are generics, biologics, biosimilars and over the counter (OTC) medicines. In recent years, the major industries of biological drugs, APIs and the Western medicine preparations have all grown steadily, while traditional Chinese medicine preparations have declined.

Taiwan’s pharmaceutical market is heavily reliant on imported drugs. Most pharma manufacturing facilities in Taiwan are either in Tainan, a city on Taiwan’s southwest coast, or around Taiwan’s capital city,...

Read the full article – start your free trial today!

Join thousands of industry professionals who rely on In Vivo for daily insights

  • Start your 7-day free trial
  • Explore trusted news, analysis, and insights
  • Access comprehensive global coverage
  • Enjoy instant access – no credit card required

More from Global Vision

Chinese Firms Build Obesity Clinical Pipeline But Face Wider Hurdles

 
• By 

Despite the ability to initiate clinical trials quickly and having strong manufacturing capacity, Chinese companies are facing multiple challenges in the obesity space.

Unpacking The Impact Of Trump’s Tariffs On Drug Pricing And Production

 
• By 

Big pharma plans to invest billions of dollars in US manufacturing to avoid tariffs proposed by the Trump Administration. However, the implementation of these plans may be delayed due to regulatory complexities and rising costs from tariffs, potentially impacting drug prices for consumers.

Barcelona’s S2 Xpeed Accelerates Hardware-Based Medtech Start-Ups From Prototype To Market

 
• By 

S2 Xpeed is driving the rapid growth of medtech and hardware start-ups in Europe. Operating under a "sweat equity" model, the program helps early-stage companies move from prototype to manufacturing readiness in exchange for equity.

Rising Leaders 2025: Partnerships Propel Crystal Qin’s LaNova To Record-Breaking Merck Deal

 
• By 

Crystal Qin has led LaNova Medicines’ swift rise in the biotech world through strategic partnerships and innovative R&D, highlighted by a record deal with big pharma.

More from In Vivo

US Health System Redesign Critical, NAM’s Medical Experts Warn Trump Government

 
• By 

The whirlwind back-and-forth on US tariffs and Robert F. Kennedy jr.’s plans to deregulate health care have become all-preoccupying, but the National Academy of Medicine was first to set out President Trump’s health administration priorities.

Podcast: “Powerful Yet Unexplored”: Commit Biologics Tackles The Complement System

 

Mikkel Wandahl Pederson, CEO and chief scientific officer at Commit Biologics, discussed the company’s mission to harness the powerful complement system for the treatment of serious diseases.

ML-Assisted Genetic Risk Score Predicts GLP-1 Adverse Events

 
• By 

Phenomix Science presented new data at Digestive Disease Week 2025 showing its machine learning-assisted genetic risk score can predict nausea and side effects from GLP-1 receptor agonists, aiding personalized obesity treatment.