In a memo today to two UK parliamentary committees studying its proposed overture, the US drugmaker laid out its vision ahead of its testimony before the science and business committees. Crucially, it sought to ease worries that British jobs will be lost and that the nation's science base eroded by the potential merger.
It repeated promises to complete AstraZeneca's research and development hub in Cambridge and to establish the new company's tax residence in England.
The maker of Viagra has already written to UK Prime Minister David Cameron to offer commitments, but the memo bolstered the message, saying the promises were "binding as a matter of English law."
The cash and stock deal has become politically fraught, with much of the debate centering on whether Pfizer can be trusted to honor promises in what would be the biggest foreign takeover of a British business. Cameron has been accused by the opposition Labour Party of being a cheerleader for the deal.
Pfizer has made three approaches to AstraZeneca since January -- all of which have been rejected. AstraZeneca said Pfizer's latest offer undervalues the company and that a takeover would disrupt its work on a potentially lucrative pipeline of new drugs.
The potential deal comes amid a spate of mergers among pharmaceutical companies, who are seeking to find new ways to grow as generic drugmakers move in to make cheaper versions of products with expiring patents.
