'Dirty' GSK inflated China prices with bribes: paper

An employee of British drug firm GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) enters their office headquarters in Shanghai on July 1, 2013. Chinese authorities have barred the British finance director of GSK in China from leaving the country, the company said Thursday as it faces a bribery probe

A Chinese state newspaper on Wednesday called GlaxoSmithKline, which is under investigation for bribery in China, "dirty and devious", accusing the British drug firm of inflating its prices. Chinese authorities say GSK staff bribed government officials, pharmaceutical industry groups, hospitals and doctors to promote sales. An editorial in the China Daily newspaper said the company passed on the cost of hundreds of millions of dollars in bribes directly to consumers. "The money used to lubricate drug sales and prescriptions contributes 20 to 30 percent to the prices patients pay for their medicine," the editorial said. "It is a shame that such a well-known transnational pharmaceutical firm has promoted its sales in such a dirty and devious way. These bad apples should receive the punishment they deserve for what they have done," it said. The Chinese government, in another investigation, is currently checking 60 pharmaceutical companies over their prices, a move analysts say is aimed at cutting healthcare costs for ordinary Chinese. Foreign baby formula companies have also been targeted over prices recently. But a commerce ministry official told reporters Wednesday that the GSK investigation did not indicate foreign companies were being unfairly singled out. "The Chinese government firmly opposes business corruption in any form. Any company, be it domestic or foreign, will be punished by the law," commerce ministry spokesman Shen Danyang said in Beijing. GSK gave the bribes directly and through travel agencies and project sponsorship, the ministry of public security said last week. Police have detained more than 20 people, including four top executives of GSK and pharmaceutical and travel industry officials. Chinese state television on Tuesday aired an interview with one of the four detained GSK executives, vice president and operations manager Liang Hong, who gave details of how the bribes were made. "In terms of getting (drugs) into hospitals, there are tendering offices throughout the country, heads and directors of pharmacies in different hospitals that we need to contact," he said. GSK said Monday it was "deeply concerned and disappointed by these serious allegations of fraudulent behaviour and ethical misconduct by certain individuals at the company and third-party agencies". An editorial in another state-backed newspaper, the Global Times, said the GSK case provided a "lesson" for those engaged in bribery. "It's notable that some foreign-invested companies have engaged in very serious, brazen bribery in China," said the newspaper, known for its nationalistic editorial stance.