Beijing should "take ownership" of anti-microbial resistance (AMR) when it hosts the G20 summit next year, said Jim O'Neill, the leader of a British government-commissioned review on the subject.
"Here is an issue that doesn't distinguish between religion,
O'Neill, former chief economist at the US investment bank and chairman of Goldman Sachs Asset Management, said that the threat
"Drug-resistant infections could cost the Chinese economy 20 trillion USD by 2050, and even more shockingly, cause an additional one million deaths per year," he said.
The review, announced last year by British Prime Minister David Cameron, has found that by 2050, drug-resistant infections could cut global gross domestic product by 2.0 to 3.5 percent and kill 10 million people a year around the world.
In comparison cancer now accounts for about 8.2 million deaths a year, according to the review.
Several novel diseases have emerged from China in recent years, including Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) and human outbreaks of different strains of bird flu.
Beijing has come under criticism in the past for its state-run hospital system, in which medical institutions are heavily dependent on
Experts say the system
O'Neill -- who is known for having coined the BRIC acronym to refer to emerging powers Brazil, Russia, India and China -- acknowledged the issue, telling reporters: "You've got to think of better ways of compensating the medical profession."