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From innovation to geopolitics: Meloni’s pharmaceutical strategy takes shape

The Meloni government is advancing a long-awaited overhaul of pharmaceutical legislation, presenting it as a tool to boost competitiveness, accelerate innovation and attract investment. For Rome, the pharmaceutical sector is no longer viewed solely through the lens of healthcare, but as a strategic asset linked to technological sovereignty, economic resilience and national autonomy.

ROME — Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni used a message to Farmindustria’s 2026 annual assembly to frame the pharmaceutical sector as a pillar of national health, economic growth and strategic autonomy, while highlighting the government’s plan to complete a long-awaited overhaul of pharmaceutical legislation.

The intervention comes as European governments increasingly link health security, industrial competitiveness and technological sovereignty to domestic pharmaceutical production and innovation.

Why it matters: Rome is positioning pharmaceuticals as a strategic industry alongside broader efforts to strengthen economic resilience and technological autonomy.

  • The government is signaling regulatory reform aimed at improving competitiveness and attracting investment.
  • Meloni linked pharmaceutical innovation to national security, a theme that has gained prominence across Europe since the pandemic and amid geopolitical tensions.
  • The sector remains one of Italy’s strongest export-oriented industries and a key component of the country’s life sciences ecosystem.

The big picture: In her message to the assembly, Meloni described pharmaceuticals as “one of the absolute excellences of Made in Italy” and a strategic sector for “the health, growth and security of the nation.”

  • She argued that the industry embodies three interconnected forms of value: innovation, research and security.
  • According to Meloni, innovation improves citizens’ health and quality of life, research advances medical treatments, and security strengthens the country’s technological sovereignty and resilience.
  • The message reflects a broader government narrative that increasingly connects industrial policy with strategic autonomy and national competitiveness.

Zoom in: The pharmaceutical reform. The most concrete policy signal in Meloni’s remarks concerned the government’s work on a new consolidated pharmaceutical law.

  • She described the planned “Testo Unico della legislazione farmaceutica” as a reform “awaited for decades” and said the government is working “with great determination” to bring it to completion.

According to Meloni, the reform is intended to:

  • simplify the regulatory framework;
  • provide greater certainty for industry operators;
  • accelerate access to innovation;
  • help Italy remain competitive amid technological shifts, including artificial intelligence and new therapeutic platforms.
  • The government presents the measure as a tool to strengthen both industrial competitiveness and patient access to new treatments.

Between the lines: Meloni’s intervention suggests that Rome sees life sciences not only as a healthcare issue but also as an industrial and geopolitical asset.

  • “Investing in life sciences means investing in one’s own strategic autonomy,” she said, linking the sector directly to broader questions of resilience and national capability.
  • The message also underscores the government’s effort to make Italy more attractive for investment while preserving its industrial leadership in pharmaceuticals.

The bottom line: Meloni used the Farmindustria assembly to reinforce a central theme of her government’s economic strategy: pharmaceutical innovation is no longer framed solely as a health policy priority, but as a strategic asset tied to competitiveness, technological sovereignty and national resilience. The planned pharmaceutical reform is emerging as a key instrument in that agenda.

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