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Painkiller sale plan to US gives France major headache

Natalie Fisher by Natalie Fisher
October 15, 2024
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Paris (AFP) – The planned sale of France’s best-selling medical drug to US investors has caused the government a splitting headache after an outcry from politicians on all sides. Even President Emmanuel Macron is involved in the debate centred on a perceived “loss of sovereignty” if popular painkiller Doliprane falls into American hands.

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Doliprane is the brand under which healthcare giant Sanofi sells paracetamol, a non-opioid analgesic to ease mild to moderate pain and fever. In French pharmacies, the brand’s colourful boxes often line entire shelf walls, and Doliprane comes in many doses—from 100 mg for newborn babies to 1,000 mg for adults—and in tablet, capsule, suppository, and liquid forms. It is so ubiquitous that French people call any paracetamol product Doliprane, even when made by a different manufacturer.

Sanofi, France’s biggest healthcare company and among the world’s top 12, has found out over the past few days just how attached the French are to the drug. Political and trade union reactions came in hard and fast after the company announced last week that it was in talks with New York-based private equity firm Clayton, Dubilier & Rice (CD&R) to sell a 50-percent controlling stake in its subsidiary Opella, which makes Doliprane and other consumer healthcare products. The planned spinoff, it said, would be part of Sanofi’s strategy to focus less on over-the-counter medication and more on innovative medicines and vaccines, including for polio, influenza, and meningitis.

“This is another symbol for the loss of our sovereignty,” thundered Fabien Roussel, France’s Communist party leader, calling the planned sale “shameful”. Jordan Bardella, president of the far-right National Rally (RN) party, said that “the piecemeal sale of France carries on”.

– ‘Protect France’ –

Green party deputy Marine Tondelier said the government had “learned nothing” from the Covid pandemic when France suffered from medication bottlenecks blamed mostly on the outsourcing of production to other countries. An ad hoc group of centre-right lawmakers—including from Macron’s party—stated that the sale represented “a very worrying risk for our national security”. Boris Vallaud, parliamentary leader for the Socialists, reminded the government of 2022 when a sharp rise in demand for paracetamol caused some shortages in French pharmacies.

“Already some months ago, paracetamol was nowhere to be found,” he said. “And now they want to give it up completely?” In a message to Finance Minister Antoine Armand—who has been in the job only since last month—the deputies said the planned sale went against “the re-establishment of France’s sovereignty in the health sector”. The government had the legal option, they said, of posing conditions or blocking the sale on the grounds that it concerns a “sensitive” industry.

Macron entered the fray Monday, saying that “the government has the instruments needed to protect France” from any unwanted “capital ownership”. The American investment fund is offering more than 15 billion euros ($16.4 billion) for Opella, according to Les Echos business daily. Faced with the protests, Armand on Friday told Sanofi and the potential buyer that Opella’s “headquarters and decision-making centres” had to remain in France. On Monday, Industry Minister Marc Ferracci said that current production also had to stay, “to safeguard employment and to secure supply for French people”. The same went for research and development facilities, he said.

Speaking to broadcaster France 3, Ferracci said the government would invoke a procedure for the control of foreign investment if the buyers failed to meet the demands. But he added: “I honestly believe that those commitments will be made.” Sanofi told AFP that CD&R was a solid partner which brings to the deal “sufficient financial guarantees to maintain and develop Opella’s activities in France and the world.”

© 2024 AFP

Tags: national securitypharmaceuticalspolitics
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