Andrew Witty inherited a drugmaker sick with scandal and spent the next eight years patching up his patient.GlaxoSmithKline may finally be well again.
“Honestly, I don’t regret a single decision,” says Witty, 52. “Someone smarter than me probably could have done it better. But I think it was the right direction for us to go in.”
History might remember a different Glaxo: The company whose revenues are flat since Witty took over and whose shares have under performed its peers. The company accused of bribery in half-a-dozen countries. The firm that, in July 2012, pleaded guilty to civil and criminal charges in the US for marketing in illegal ways drugs like Paxil for depression and Avandia for diabetes, and agreed to pay $3 billion in fines, the largest such settlement ever. After that bruising Witty did something pharma chief executives almost never do. He apologised. “On behalf of GSK, I want to express our regret and reiterate that we have learnt from the mistakes that were made,” he said in a prepared statement.
Esta historia es de la edición October 14, 2016 de Forbes India.
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