Taxing Times Ahead For Pharma Industry, Says PWC Study
by Robin Pilgrim, LawAndTax-News.com, London
03 December 2009
Tax planning will become more complicated and challenging for tax executives working for pharmaceutical and life sciences companies, according to a study published by PricewaterhouseCoopers entitled 'Pharma 2020: Taxing times ahead - Which path will you take?'.
The paper, according to PwC, "focusses on the challenges ahead but also
shows how companies can adapt their tax planning to support the provision of
outcomes-based healthcare and remain competitive".
It anticipates that:
- "A new way of doing business is inevitable, but new models will make
tax planning more complex and increase the effective tax rate for the industry.
Pharmaceutical companies will form more partnerships, alliances and turn to
M&A as well as embarking on a programme where they will provide diverse
services beyond the traditional product offering and to fill the product pipeline.
This model could cause the effective tax rate to rise, make transfer pricing
procedures more complicated and potentially result in a greater disconnect
between revenue and costs from a tax point of view.
- An expanded customer base, created by wider access to healthcare and growing
populations in emerging markets will increase profitability. Further, healthcare
reforms, technology advancements and other market forces are driving outcomes-focused
healthcare delivery. Pharmaceutical companies will need to create greater
value and demonstrate effectiveness by shifting from a purely product-centric
focus to a broader service model, complementing traditional products with
holistic packages of services to improve patient outcomes. Increased end-market
services are taxed differently than products resulting in a shift in the tax
burden.
- There will be heightened competition between states and among emerging market
countries and those historically favourable to the industry to attract pharmaceutical
and life sciences companies through tax incentives. As such, there will be
a shift in profit growth to the East and increased outsourcing of manufacturing
to emerging markets.
- Long-term business plans to grow, buy, merge or sell will be the crux, not
the afterthought, of tax strategy for pharmaceutical companies. In the future,
tax strategy will be even more closely aligned with business development strategy,
and tax executives will occupy an important seat at the table as pharma companies
contemplate business model changes."
A comprehensive report in our Intelligence Report series
describing how to get an optimal blend of tax-efficiency and profits from global
manufacturing operations through judicious use of offshore and onshore techniques, and
showing how the corporate supply chain is full of opportunities to save tax
while optimising efficiency, is available in the Lowtax Library at http://www.lowtaxlibrary.com/asp/subs_reports.asp
and a description of the report can be seen at
http://www.lowtaxlibrary.com/asp/description_report8.asp
Write a comment