As the world’s second-largest healthcare market, China spends about $575 billion a year on the sector, roughly equivalent to Sweden’s GDP. But because of China’s large population, that translates into only $420 in per capita healthcare spending, just 4% of what an average American spends. This healthcare supply shortage is exacerbated by rising demand from wealthier Chinese who seek quality care, better insurance, and diverse services.
On the regulatory side, the Chinese government continues to reform the healthcare sector by allowing doctors to work
outside the public hospital system, encouraging the privatization of hospitals, and expanding public healthcare insurance to cover private hospitals.
The significant mismatch between supply and demand, coupled with policy changes to support the sector, have incentivized private investment to flock into areas ranging from advanced pharmaceuticals and medical devices to primary care clinics, elderly care, and insurance products.
Zhejiang Chimin Pharmaceutical mainly manufactures and distributes transfusion devices such as syringes. The company sells its products in both the domestic market and in more than 90 countries as an original equipment manufacturer for Retractable Technologies Inc., a medical device firm based in Texas.
Li Lisha
Taizhou, Zhejiang
(576) 8406.6800
investment@chimin.cn
In 2016, the company acquired Linear Chemicals S.L. for about €5 million. The target is a biotech and diagnosis firm based in Spain.