It has been on the cards for some time--and some cuts have already been implemented, for sure--but Bayer has made its restructuring official: 6100 jobs have been eliminated at the German specialty pharma company, which ought to go a long way towards its goal of €700 million in savings by 2009.
Most of the jobs lost come from Europe (3150) and the majority of which will be administrative redundancies in Germany, the direct result of Bayer's €17 billion takeover of Schering AG last year.
And surely it all makes sense. But what's more important in the long run is where is Bayer going from here. The company has more boldly than most larger pharmaceutical companies embraced specialist medicines as the way forward--it didn't have much of a choice, really. The move seems to be paying off; progress may or may not be confirmed when Bayer talks up its R&D strategy at the end of the second quarter.
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