DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Private equity is eying Asia’s healthcare funding gap as countries get wealthier and older

March 29, 2026
in News
Private equity is eying Asia’s healthcare funding gap as countries get wealthier and older

Asia is getting wealthier, older—and potentially sicker, as rates of non-communicable disease rise across Southeast Asia. Yet governments aren’t investing enough in public healthcare, threatening to open up a massive funding gap.

“Asia has more diabetes, cancer and cardiovascular patients than anywhere else in the world,” Abrar Mir, co-founder and managing partner of Singapore-based healthcare private equity firm Quadria Capital, tells Fortune.

Asia’s healthcare market is expected to reach roughly $5 trillion in size by 2030 and contribute 40% of growth in the global healthcare sector, according to a report by the Boston Consulting Group. Yet it currently accounts for just 20% of global healthcare spending, despite making up more than half of the world’s population.

Southeast Asia is particularly at risk from rising rates of chronic disease. The World Health Organization estimates that non-communicable diseases (NCDs) claim 8.5 million lives annually in the region, driven by lifestyle factors such as tobacco and alcohol use, physical inactivity and unhealthy diets.

Countries are also aging faster than their level of development might suggest. Thailand, for example is quickly becoming an “ultra-aged” society: The country has more people aged over 60 than those under 15.

ASEAN governments aren’t keeping pace on public health spending, due to competing priorities like economic development and infrastructure. Southeast Asian governments allocate less than 4% of their GDP to healthcare, compared to 9% in OECD countries.

Mir argues that shortfall open up space for private capital, adding that 70% of hospital bed in Malaysia are funded by the corporate sector. “In this region, private capital is essential in building out social infrastructure,” he says. “If you don’t have it, many people would go without access to basic healthcare.”

Quadria, which has about $4.2 billion in assets under management, invests in health companies across Southeast Asia, including Indonesia’s Hermina Hospitals, Malaysia-based Straits Orthopaedics, and Vietnam’s mother-and-baby retailer Con Cung. The firm also partners with sovereign wealth funds, development finance institutions and impact investors, though Mir declined to cite specific names.

Healthcare innovation

Parts of Asia are quickly moving up the biopharma value chain. The region accounted for more than 85% of growth in innovative drug pipelines in 2024, led by China and South Korea, according to a report from McKinsey. That year, the region also generated almost two-thirds of the world’s biotech patent grants, more than five times what came out of Europe.

Southeast Asia, however, is further back on the value chain, and attracts global firms due to its low production costs, rather than an edge in healthcare innovation. “Over time, we think this will translate to innovation as it has in China, but in Southeast Asia, it isn’t there yet,” Mir says.

Regardless, Mir concludes that Asia’s health sector holds immense potential. “Today’s healthcare firms must have a clear strategy in Asia, or they will no longer be global leaders,” he says.

“We can do it better and cheaper.”

The post Private equity is eying Asia’s healthcare funding gap as countries get wealthier and older appeared first on Fortune.

Women’s networking event illegally sidelined men, Trump administration claims
News

Women’s networking event illegally sidelined men, Trump administration claims

by Washington Post
March 31, 2026

As company networking events go, it was unremarkable: About 250 female employees of a Coca-Cola distributor gathered inside the ballroom ...

Read more
News

I was a laid-off software engineer who pivoted into blue-collar work because of AI. One year in, I couldn’t be happier.

March 31, 2026
News

DACA recipient returns to U.S. after judge finds she was unlawfully deported

March 31, 2026
News

I broke up with my Kindle. Here’s how I turned the page.

March 31, 2026
News

This 5-month-old was born on U.S. soil. She may never be a citizen.

March 31, 2026
Trump Pardoned Them. Then They Committed More Crimes.

Trump Pardoned Them. Then They Committed More Crimes.

March 31, 2026
The Greatest Threat to Our Elections Is No Longer Foreign

The Greatest Threat to Our Elections Is No Longer Foreign

March 31, 2026
Americans Count Their Pennies at the Pump as the Iran War Grinds On

Americans Count Their Pennies at the Pump as the Iran War Grinds On

March 31, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026