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Thanks to imported drugs, America has lost control of its medicine cabinet

13 14
22.06.2025

America is facing a growing crisis in its medical system — not from a lack of talent or innovation, but from a breakdown in the control, safety and supply of essential medicines. Our growing reliance on imports is now driving serious drug shortages, destabilizing supply chains and increasingly making medications unsafe.

At the root of it is a hard truth: We no longer have control of the medicines we depend on every day.

In 2002, America manufactured 83.7 percent of the pharmaceuticals it consumed. By 2024, that number had dropped to just 37.1 percent. Meanwhile, the U.S. pharmaceutical trade deficit has soared, reaching a record $118.3 billion in 2024. We didn’t just outsource manufacturing — we outsourced the sovereignty and safety of our health care system.

This means that nearly two-thirds of America’s pharmaceutical supplies are now imported. Most critical medications, such as generic drugs, now come from China and India.

China controls 80 to 90 percent of the global supply of active pharmaceutical ingredients — the chemical building blocks of modern medicine. Even drugs labeled “Made in the USA” often chemically originate in China. And India, which

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