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Recipe for science superpower? ‘Pay your taxes with pride’

Huge dividends from Denmark’s weight loss drug industry are result of high tax and high investment economy, says Nobel prizewinner Morten Meldal

Published on
August 10, 2025
Last updated
August 10, 2025
Source: Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting

Denmark’s world-leading success in commercialising research should not be written off as a one-off confined to the country’s booming weight loss drug industry, a Nobel-winning scientist has argued.

Since Novo Nordisk’s diabetes treatment Ozempic was sold as weight loss drug Wegovy, the Danish biotech company has quickly grown into one of the world’s biggest companies and Denmark’s largest single corporate taxpayer, contributing almost $4 billion (?3 billion) in corporate taxes in the – about half of the country’s total corporate take.

A further $3.8 billion in income taxes – which can reach up to 56 per cent for higher earners – was also taken from Novo Nordisk staff in 2024.

That success has led to major interest in how Denmark’s?model of combined strong fundamental and applied research?had paid off so spectacularly and whether it can be replicated, although some pundits have wondered whether the serendipitous discovery of Ozempic – whose roots lie in research on snake venom – represents a one-off for its industrial science sector

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Speaking to 探花视频, however, the Nobel laureate Morten Meldal,?who is professor of chemistry at the University of Copenhagen, said Novo Nordisk’s story should not be seen as an outlier in Danish research but just one of many prosperous science-based companies based in the country of just six million people.

“Novo Nordisk is the result of Denmark’s system – its success is directly attributable to how our society operates: we have high taxes but those taxes result in huge tax-exempt industrial foundations funding science and creating opportunities for both academic and industrial success. That is why Novo Nordisk happened in Denmark,” said Meldal, who won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 2022.

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While Novo Nordisk – whose $570 billion valuation last year was famously larger than Denmark’s entire GDP – has captured the interest of research policymakers, it should be understood in a wider context of sustained investment in research from industry, he added.

“Look at Novozymes, Maersk, Carlsberg – if you consider how much our companies invest in research it is far more than the government. Novo Nordisk has the blockbuster product now but it arrived within the context of our system – there are lots of companies doing well by commercialising research.”

Noting the advances made by US-based Eli Lilly, which has two medications (Mounjaro and Zepbound) approved for use by American regulators, Meldal predicted that Novo Nordisk’s undisputed advantage in this area would eventually be eroded. But Denmark’s system will produce other big science success stories, said the biochemist, who leads the synthesis group in the chemistry department at the Carlsberg Laboratory.

“We have won so much with Novo Nordisk but its scientific success is the rule, not the exception,” he said,?underlining the importance of basic research to create the opportunities of tomorrow.

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Denmark’s success in research has an even simpler root, continued Meldal, who was speaking at the annual Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting held in southern Germany?last month.

“The best investment that any country can make is education – the payback on this is huge and that allows for other investments, such as science. To do this you need our high tax system, and a government dedicated to long term success of the entire society,” he said.

“My advice to any country who wants Denmark’s system of science is simple: pay your taxes with joy, and ask for return on investment for the community.” he said.

jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (2)

Do the arithmetic--not even math--this does not add up. No more than a slogan
new
Yes I agree, however, I think we in the UK have to finally decide whether we want to be like the US with low taxes and low levels of welfare or Europe with high taxation and high levels of public service etc. It seems to me that we want to have US levels of taxation combined with European standards of living. We see this all the time, look at the debates about the levels of disability support and winter fuel allowance.

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