The Rise and Rise of Medtech in Asia
The Rise and Rise of Medtech in Asia
The Rise and Rise of Medtech in Asia
Cut through the noise, though, and we find that Asia is on the rise in MedTech just as it is
in other industries – indeed, Asia today already represents 23 percent of the global market.
Within the next five years (by 2023), Asia will eclipse Europe to become the second-largest
regional market. During that period, Asia will also be the major growth engine among global
Authored by: MedTech markets, contributing 35 percent of total incremental growth (Exhibit 1).
Daniel Wilson
Rebecca Pearson
Emily Roberts
John Thompson
35 percent of the 19 55 7%
42 (35%)
growth over the 24
406 35 137
next six years. 6%
36 (26%)
ROW
95
APAC (23%)
136 3%
EU 111
198 3%
US 163
Put simply, the strong fundamentals of rising healthcare demand and wealth in the region
will override short-term dislocations at country or sub-regional level, which are bound
to happen. The region is also increasingly recognized as a major source of product
technology innovation as well as for its innovative business models and unique healthcare
ecosystem. Nevertheless, success in Asia does not come easy – on the contrary, it
requires agility, innovation, and long-term commitment to stay abreast of trends in this
fiercely competitive market.
To take the pulse of where Asia MedTech stands today, and to understand its challenges,
opportunities, and priorities, we surveyed 160 APAC presidents and Asian country
general managers from some 30 multinational MedTech companies via a survey
conducted amongst members of APACMed and selected executive interviews. This
paper summarizes insights on how MedTech can thrive amid the challenging and
complex external environment in Asia, step up on innovation, commercial, and strategic
capabilities, and embrace the next wave of growth in the region.
Asia MedTech executives paint a mixed picture of overall market trends. While there is
optimism on overall economic environment and political stability, the sentiment is clearly
negative, especially on pricing (Exhibit 2). As indicated in the survey, APAC leaders are
critical of market developments over the past two years: some 80 percent of APAC
executives reported that the pricing and reimbursement environment has deteriorated or
significantly deteriorated during this time (100 percent for China general managers and
approximately 85 percent for India general managers).
Exhibit 2
APAC HQ view
Japan GM view
Macroeconomic
China GM view
environment
India GM view
Larger
deviation
Political stability
Regulatory
environment
Competitive
intensity
Pricing and
reimbursement
environment
1 2 3 4 5
Significantly Neither deteriorated Significantly
deteriorated nor improved improved
SOURCE: McKinsey 2018 Business Sentiment Survey (n=155)
Meanwhile, the growth outlook continues to be optimistic across the region: executives
across every country or region, with the exception of India, project a higher growth
compared to our survey two years ago. On average,1 companies are expecting to grow
at 15 percent in China, 13 percent in SEA, and 12 percent in India over the next five years
(Exhibit 3).
1 Mathematical average of the growth expectations of the surveyed companies. Note that this does not
represent market growth. Generally, a lower growth rate is indicated by more well-established companies,
while higher growth is indicated by emerging companies.
APAC leaders
maintain an optimistic
What growth rate do you expect for your business in the geographic regions you are
growth outlook. responsible for over the next 5 years?
2016 result
China 15%
10%
SEA 13%
12%
India 12%
14%
Korea 8%
7%
Japan 6%
5%
Australia 6%
5%
At first glance, the widely perceived pricing pressure seems at odds with these optimistic
growth projections. However, there are several factors that can help manufacturers mitigate
the often headline-catching pricing measures devised by policy makers. First, it is worth
pointing out that, due to the devolved and cyclical nature of the process, price cuts are
generally not across the board; this is because provinces and cities conduct their own
tenders approximately every two years, on a subset of medical product categories each
time – this means that price cuts do not apply to all provinces for all products in a given
year. Indeed, price cuts usually affect specific products: these are often in their mid-to-
late life cycle when they appear on the radar of regulators due to high volumes and the
existence of several alternatives on the market – in other words, products on the verge
of commoditization. A well-balanced portfolio with innovative products launching at a
healthy pace mitigates price erosion of commoditized products. Moreover, the prices (and
price cuts) that people talk about usually refer to end-customer prices, that is, the price to
healthcare providers or patients. In a market where distributors play a significant role, and
where there are often wide margins in the value chain, such price cuts need not necessarily
be absorbed by manufacturers alone. Indeed, recapturing value from distribution channels
is a common theme in the region, and each price cut provides an opportunity to reset the
margin structure between manufacturers and distributors. Manufacturers with robust value
propositions and customer pull for their products have managed to mitigate the impact of
price cuts by adjusting channel margins.
On the supply side, both in-patient volumes and out-patient volumes have mostly remained
stable in developed countries, while steadily increasing in developing countries. Overall,
market penetration in Asia is still very low, with large headroom for further growth (Exhibit 4).
Exhibit 4
Healthcare spending
and reimbursement Direction of changes
from 2007 to 2017
in APAC countries Total healthcare expenditure as % GDP
are growing,
narrowing the gap 15
14
with the West.
13
12 “Healthy Japan
11 Australia China 2030”
10 aspiration
9 Korea
8
7
6
5 India
4
3
2
1
0
0 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 100
At the same time, APAC executives – especially general managers in China and India –
feel their existing portfolios don’t adequately meet the needs of their customers. A locally
relevant portfolio targeting lower-tier customer segments is thought to be equally important
to fully tap into local market opportunities. While confidence in premium innovation is
high, only 30 percent of companies expressed confidence in their ability to develop locally
relevant products that would allow them to scale in broad market segments (Exhibit 5).
Exhibit 5
Only 30 percent
of companies
% strongly agree
expressed % agree
confidence in their Most companies believe market appropriate … while fewer companies have
innovation is an important growth driver… confidence in achieving it
ability to target new How important is market appropriate We are much better than our competitors in
patient segments with innovation for the growth of your market appropriate innovation to target new
business in next 5 years? patient segments.
market-appropriate Agree, strongly agree, % Agree, strongly agree, %
innovation.
APAC
average
~90% ~30%
~100% ~100%
China India
SOURCE: McKinsey 2018 Business Sentiment Survey (n=155)
While expanding their footprint in APAC markets, multinational companies will ultimately
have to provide answers to mid- and lower-tier customer needs. Failure to do so will not
only constrain growth but risks companies being challenged, even in their core business,
by nimble local competitors – these often start their business by filling the void in lower-tier
market segments but tend to quickly close quality and capability gaps to leading MNC
players. This conundrum of premium versus “value segment” products is not new; in fact,
companies have experimented with organic and inorganic approaches for over a decade. Our
survey results suggest that the code for success has yet to be cracked by most companies.
The growth of MedTech in Asia has been largely driven by a single commercial model:
growing the sales force plus expansion and heavy reliance on distributor networks. In
many of Asia’s key markets, those days are gone and the focus is rapidly shifting towards
more effective selling, diversification of capabilities across the commercial, service, and
clinical range of roles, and gaining back control over customers from distributors who
have evolved far beyond their core distribution capabilities and effectively control most
commercial activities.
Policy makers in many markets are taking an interest, too, and arguably have moved
faster than the industry on several fronts – for example, the role of distributors and the
value they capture in the healthcare system (widely seen as disproportionately high) has
led to restrictive policies in China (the so-called “two-invoice policy”). Decision making is
moving from clinicians towards more institutionalized processes as is the case with more
mature markets. New forms of reimbursement (DRGs) and data-driven approaches are
fundamentally at odds with a traditional commercial model that puts physician relationships
at the center.
Executives
% strongly agree
prioritize sales force
% agree
effectiveness over SFE is now seen as a more important
growth driver than footprint expansion Opportunity to improve SFE
footprint expansion.
How important will it be for the Our sales force is effective at
growth of your business in the communicating the value of our
next 5 years? products
Agree, strongly agree, % Agree, strongly agree, %
APAC
average
Improved Expansion of
SFE sales force
Consistent
assessment across
all APAC countries
It is thus unsurprising that manufacturers are embracing this digital landscape in multiple
ways: as a channel, as a means to educate at scale, in order to listen into customer
sentiment, and so on. Indeed, pharmaceutical companies have experimented with this for a
while and have developed a wide range of models that leverage digital ecosystems.
As Asia’s MedTech market continues to grow and mature, so too will the stakes for MedTech
leaders. The industry will continue to grapple along the way with the challenges discussed
above. In this context, we should expect to see a relentless focus on data and the potential
of HEOR to drive local value, while MedTech companies only have to look to the success
of adjacent sectors such as pharma for examples of how partnerships can enable them to
move forward with digital. While there are perhaps no cookie-cutter recipes for success
for an industry as diverse as MedTech, in a region as diverse as Asia, we believe there are
several no-regret moves for companies to set the stage for a successful business trajectory
in Asia.
APAC
average
~55% 45%
~65% ~50%
China
average
~25% ~25%
~40% ~40%
To make matters worse, the shortage is even more pronounced in the countries that matter
most for absolute growth – especially in China where competition for key talent has become
more intense, as skilled executives increasingly choose entrepreneurship or opt to join new
entrants to the healthcare ecosystem, rather than traditional MedTech companies.
Traditional MedTech product manufacturers must therefore rethink their role and the
way they deliver value to the healthcare ecosystem. We believe that a big part of winning
models will be the ability to partner with other players in the healthcare ecosystem. Most
companies have dedicated teams and clear processes for traditional business development
(for instance, M&A). By comparison, explicit partnership strategies and processes to scan
ecosystems for value-added partnership scenarios, accompanied by efficient execution,
seem far less common. We believe that this is a missed opportunity, especially when
contrasting MedTech with the pharmaceutical industry where innovative partnerships,
often involving multiple parties, are used much more often to the benefit of all partners (as
well as patients and healthcare providers). Especially in times where asset valuations make
traditional M&A transactions hard to underwrite, partnership strategies should be devised
with equal rigor. This will offer a plethora of opportunities to increase reach and leverage in
the healthcare ecosystem while closing or circumventing an organization’s capability gaps.
3) Data, data, data: getting ready for a value-based healthcare world in Asia
Many of Asia’s healthcare systems are doubling down on healthcare coverage and
access. At the same time, they are taking more interest in the value they get for the outlay
of public money. In Japan, the government has pledged to tie pricing and reimbursement
more closely to outcomes. In China, the government is leading a major push from acute
care towards prevention as well as towards case-based payments and DRGs as major
reimbursement models. In Indonesia, government has instituted a capitation system that
pays the equivalent of USD 1 a month per person to healthcare facilities in order to provide
primary care coverage for patients. Australia is among the leading systems in the world
regarding health economics research and related funding models. In brief, Asia is moving
towards more sophisticated ways to manage healthcare funding. On the back of digitization
and rapidly improving data transparency at scale, some of these markets might soon
surpass western systems in their ability to aggregate and analyze healthcare data.