The High Costs of Biden's Price-Controlled Drugs
Americans will be sicker and deader in the long run than they otherwise would have been.

Government-imposed price controls on goods and services always lead to shortages. For example, economic research has consistently shown that rent control results in less new housing construction. The Biden administration's imposition of price caps on prescription drugs under the provisions of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) will result in much the same thing: fewer new cures developed.
The IRA gives the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) the authority to negotiate prices on select prescription drugs covered under Part B and Part D of Medicare. The government's "negotiated" prices actually amount to little more than extortion. If a pharmaceutical manufacturer does not comply with the government's negotiated price, it faces a choice between an excise tax that eventually rises to 95 percent of its product's sales in the U.S. or the withdrawal of all of its drugs from Medicare coverage.
The IRA directs HHS to negotiate prices for 10 drugs in 2026, 15 drugs in 2027, 15 more in 2028, and 20 drugs in 2029 and every year afterward. HHS will publish the list of maximum fair prices for these drugs two years before the prices go into effect.
On Tuesday, the Biden administration revealed the first 10 drugs that would be subject to government negotiation. They include the blood thinner Eliquis, the diabetes drug Jardiance, and the rheumatoid arthritis treatment Enbrel. In his statement, President Joe Biden cited an estimate by the Congressional Budget Office that drug price negotiations and inflation rebates will save taxpayers $160 billion by 2031. What he did not mention are the costs of more disease and death the price controls will cause as they slow the development of new pharmaceuticals.
A 2016 econometric study in Forum for Health Economics and Policy evaluated the long-term impact of price controls in Medicare Part D. Applying Veterans Health Administration drug pricing policies to Medicare, a team of researchers from the private health consultancy firm Precision Health Economics calculated that it would "save between $0.1 trillion and $0.3 trillion (US$2015) in lifetime drug spending for people born in 1949–2005." On the other hand, lower revenues for drug manufacturers would mean that they invest less in new pharmaceutical discovery and development. New drug introductions would fall by as much as 25 percent relative to the status quo, according to the researchers. As a consequence, they report, "life expectancy for the cohort born in 1991–1995 is reduced by almost 2 years relative to the status quo. Overall, we find that price controls would reduce lifetime welfare by $5.7 to $13.3 trillion (US$2015) for the US population born in 1949–2005." Allegedly "saving" $160 billion over the next 10 years doesn't look so good now, does it?
In their 2021 University of Chicago working paper, economists Tomas J. Philipson and Troy Durie analyzed how price controls proposed in the earlier and somewhat more stringent Lower Drug Costs Now Act would impact medical innovation. They calculated that the proposed drug price controls would lead to a 44.6 percent decline in pharmaceutical company research and development and 254 fewer new drug approvals between 2021 and 2039. They note that an earlier Council of Economic Advisers' analysis calculated, owing to the reduction of new drug introductions stemming from the proposed price controls, that 100 fewer new drugs would be developed, resulting in a loss of between 37.5 million to 100 million life-years by 2029 for Americans. For comparison, a team of researchers estimated in 2022 that the COVID-19 pandemic had by then resulted in the loss of 9.7 million life-years in the U.S.
An obviously self-interested survey by the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America found that IRA drug price controls were already impacting its members' research and development decisions. Specifically, 78 percent are expected to cancel early-stage pipeline projects; 63 percent planned to shift research and development away from small molecule medicines; and 95 percent are expected to develop fewer new uses for medicines because of the limited time available before being subject to government price setting.
The shift away from research and development on small molecule drugs (basically pills) occurs in part because the IRA grants only nine years before price controls can be imposed on them, whereas biologics (basically injectables) get 13 years. Also, drug companies would heretofore often introduce new drugs to relatively small patient populations, e.g., those with rare diseases or late-stage illnesses, while continuing to research their efficacy for larger ones. Doing that now would start the nine-year countdown to price controls, so companies will likely delay introducing new drugs while they seek to identify the largest and most lucrative patient population.
The upshot: While the new price controls will make some drugs cheaper in the short run, Americans will be sicker and deader in the long run than they otherwise would have been.
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If the drug producers presented a unified front and went on strike against Medicare, refusing to negotiate prices and letting their drugs drop from Medicare coverage, how long do you think the politicians would hold out?
I think we’d see the drug companies get nationalized.
I don’t think there is a single industry hated more than drug companies. Only politicians are keeping them around, because of bribes/lobbying
Maybe not nationalized, not when the feds can seize or void the drug patents and turn them over to generics manufacturers without the sunk costs of research.
|"The shift away from research and development on small molecule drugs (basically pills) occurs in part because the IRA grants only nine years before price controls can be imposed on them, whereas biologics (basically injectables) get 13 years."|
Notice that "rule-makers" have inserted new "rules" into the game. Do you think this is the last "in-game rules revision" coming down the pike? Put the law in Microsoft Word, order a word search to find and correct "years" to "months". Understand that the clamp-down coming is for Medicare - old people. With slowing of the drug pipeline it will be old people who pay the largest price of unfound or unrealeased new drugs.
Also understand that the people who will be most affected are those "useless eaters" sucking at the teat of Social Security (set to go broke in the mid-term future). Now contemplate - is the affect on those "useless eaters" a bug, or a feature?
The idea is appealing, but it wouldn't work - once the drug companies refuse to negotiate prices on a handful of drugs, the politicians will talk about how the pharma companies are killing sick people.
The blow-back would be horrible.
The roll out is so protracted, it's ridiculous:
"The IRA directs HHS to negotiate prices for 10 drugs in 2026, 15 drugs in 2027, 15 more in 2028, and 20 drugs in 2029 and every year afterward. HHS will publish the list of maximum fair prices for these drugs two years before the prices go into effect."
By the time 100 specific, name-brand drugs have their prices negotiated it will be 2031
The pace is crazy.
The pace is 100% intentional. Promises of something tomorrow for votes today - it's the totalitarian playbook which never changes.
What % of the pharma market do you think Medicare is? I'd guess well over 70%.
What's your argument to side with big pharma? These businesses have been practicing price gauging for decades in complete impunity, and somehow we should take it easy on them because ...? The same lame argument about cutting research funding doesn't hold water, as big pharma spends most of its budget on advertising not on R&D. They let biotech startups do the heavy lifting and acquire them when a potential blockbuster drug is discovered. Big pharma are leeches that feed on human misery.
So go start a F'En pharmacy company dumb*ss.
I do love intelligent, sharp, and witty repartee, TJJ. I just wish I could find some.
Drug companies, wittingly or unwittingly, decided to play the short game, and in the process have become the "man in the middle", with no friends to be found.
They gouge - yes, gouge - on prices here. An argument can be made that it is their right to do so, and principled conservatives should be their natural allies against the variety of other interests who seek to penalize, control, and regulate them into servitude, but -
In selling, for whatever reasons, various products "overseas" for a fraction of what they've elected to charge here, they have offended conservative sense of fair play, and so irritated the only potential allies they might have had, that many of us would be satisfied to see them nationalized, their executives put through the January 6 Clown Car court system and then imprisoned, and their stockholders impoverished. All-in-all, not an enviable position to have worked yourself into!
Excellent point, in theory. Historically, however, governments use such expressions of independence as justification to nationalize said businesses. Would never have happened under Trump, but this illegitimate administration is literally salivating at the thought...
People aren't required to use only Medicare, they can buy other insurance to supplement Medicare. The government should fix the price of goods that it buys. If a drug isn't worth the price the companies are charging, the government shouldn't buy it.
There needs to be a different economic model for funding drug research instead of gouging the hell out of Americans.
Well, spreading it around to everyone else in the world might help a bit. They regulate the hell out of their drug prices, and the costs from places like Canada, Germany, et.al. get passed on to US consumers. If these places stopped capping their drug prices, ours might just start falling.
If you think that lifting drug price caps in these countries would help lower their price in the US, you are naive. Drugs have much higher prices in the US because these companies know they can get away with it. It's not a compensation mechanism to cope with lower prices in the rest of the world. It's just greed.
Try Free-Enterprise for once.
"That' crazy talk!"
...screams every totalitarian in unison.
No different model needed. Just stop all extensions of patents, so that generic manufacturers can jump in after 10 years.
How long before China is rich enough to start funding drug research? I mean, other than the sort of research they were doing in Wuhan. It takes a heap of capital to invest in such things as drug research, it's why there's not a lot of new drugs coming out of Guatemala or Uzbekistan.
Never, cheaper to copy US drugs...
Besides, they're busy developing novel Corona viruses...
Once all health care is nationalized we won't need to worry about that anymore. Who needs 24 different kinds of drugs anyway?
The Wuhan lab isn't funded by China, it was funded by Fauci.
It is important to remember that significant portions of the basic research is or has been government funded. Drug companies do significant research but it is more in the application of the drug. The drug companies often know that there is profit at the end of their research, while the government funded portion is made with no known future profit.
"The IRA directs HHS to negotiate prices for 10 drugs in 2026, 15 drugs in 2027, 15 more in 2028, and 20 drugs in 2029 and every year afterward. HHS will publish the list of maximum fair prices for these drugs two years before the prices go into effect."
So today Biden announced that in August, 2025 (the next administration) we'll see these ten drug prices drop? Wow, talk about delayed gratification.
Reminds me of the announcement the other day when he announced he signed off on a proposal he 'hoped' to send over to Congress...
There's no sense of urgency in these folks, is there?
Gives pharma time to figure out "work arounds".
What's confusing here is the word "negotiated". How can a company not comply with a price it's agreed on by negotiation? The implication is that the HHS sets a price rather than negotiates with the company.
If a pharmaceutical manufacturer does not comply with the government’s negotiated price, it faces a choice between an excise tax that eventually rises to 95 percent of its product’s sales in the U.S. or the withdrawal of all of its drugs from Medicare coverage.
I don’t get what this excise tax is supposed to do? The withdrawal from Medicare coverage makes complete sense. Customer decides what they are gonna pay. That’s how markets work. If the US government is gonna wield its economic power re prices, then the option for producers is to decide whether to produce or not and that’s also how markets work.
The profit margin for pharma companies is a bit less than double what it is in aggregate for all other companies. Meaning that until those margins are halved, capital will still flow into pharma development. That’s the amount of money that is subject to negotiation.
Isn't extortion illegal?
Not if it's done through the state apparatus.
There are other markets/nations where these rules wouldn't apply. Wouldn't drug companies still have incentives to develop new drugs for those markets?
As it stands now, the US market for drugs subsidizes the rest of the world. The US is where the drug companies make bank. But they are happy enough to get incremental extra income from the same drugs in markets where there are price controls.
To save money on diabetes supplies (that don't require an RX), I buy some stuff on ebay. Some items I receive are special versions made for the Indian market. Printed right on the box is the maximum retail price that may be charged for the product (in this case, lancets). It costs me one-third of what I would pay at CVS, but obviously the manufacturer probably tries to control distribution of this version of the product by restricting it to India. Somehow I have it though.
So, why should the rest of the world have lower prices than the US? That is a a normative question. The fact is that they do have lower prices, probably because of price controls of one form or another, yet they still get the new drugs because the big money made in the US creates the incentive for the rest of the world.
US consumers of drugs shouldn't have to pay for the entire world's incentives by having the largest profit margins for drugs mostly happening here.
So the Nazi's had to Nazify the medical and drugs. Now the medical and drugs are out of reach price wise; so they'll Nazify some more until there's nothing left.
Because that's what [Na]tional So[zi]alists do..... They think 'armed-theft' makes things. Gov-Guns can provide resources. They never think deep enough to realize there's only so much Gov-Guns can STEAL before it's all gone. Criminal dipsh*ts.
I could have believed this ten years ago, but not now. Look at the mRNA vaccines. 25 years of public funding for R&D, then the military takes over and funds all the production and distribution costs, and then we still have to pay retail++ pricing, while big pharma makes record profits. If ever there was a case for a windfall tax, that is it.
Yep; Crony Socialism for the WIN! /s
Correct me if I’m wrong, but don’t corporate health insurance companies already negotiate prices for their contracts with the pharmaceutical companies for your company benefits plan? If that’s true, then why can’t the government do the same thing instead of just having to pay whatever the pharmaceutical companies want to charge?
Because you health insurance company doesn’t pack around ‘guns’ with them and putting government in that spot is exactly as-if they did. What entity would you turn to – to ensure any justice after that?
The dumbest thing about socialism is pretending that corporatizing the government is going to be more just by merging the justice department in with the corporation. Rightfully worded as crony socialism.
But if one needs clear-cut examples, experiments look no further than our current state of healthcare (the most expensive around) only after all the 'government' had big-plans. Healthcare use to come to your door for the price of a pizza; as dentistry still does because government hasn't taken over dentistry nearly as much.
"Rightfully worded as crony socialism."
I prefer "Crapitalism."
Capitalism by definition doesn't involve government-dictated production. Crony Capitalism is an oxymoron from lefty-indoctrination.
This was also my thought. Large purchasers of any product, not just drugs, have the power to negotiate prices. So why is a large purchaser like the government have its hands tied?
…because BIG [WE] gangs packing ‘guns’ isn’t a “negotiate”-ion.
Of course; you already know that - and that's exactly why you want 'government' involved. To go STEAL for you. The party of criminals.
Bastiat said taxes are legalized theft. So, if Medicare has to pay more money for the drugs it covers, then it’s just that much more it has to “steal” from the taxpayers.
Medicare is the crony socialism I speak of. The problems aren't going to go away by lobbing for MORE of the very roots of those problems.
There's negotiation, and then there's taxes.
If they don't accept the government's stated price, then they face an "excise tax that eventually rises to 95 percent of its product's sales in the U.S.".
Big insurers only threat at the negotiating table is to not cover the drugs purchases on their plans. Government has the same option PLUS "and we'll tax the living shit out of you if you don't comply."
The government is not "negotiating" any more than the mafia "negotiates"..."Nice store you got there, be a shame if something bad were to happen to it, maybe a fire..."
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Government never added value to any process, good, nor service, nor ever reduced any price. Government is a parasite, and in the very best of circumstances only adds a little cost.
We haven't seen the very best of circumstances in centuries.
The government is not a producer, but rather a consumer. The government purchases to provide for goods and services for its citizens. So we should not expect the government to add value, but it should be able to negotiate prices for the citizens it serves.
"The government purchases" --- Oh do tell; with what *earnings* and how did the government acquire those ?earnings?
As with every left-leaner; you play the biggest cognitive dissonance game and display of ignorance to what 'government' *IS* in an attempt to STEAL for your selfish criminalistic benefit. Never stopping once in your full-on greed to realize that there is only so much that can be STOLEN before it's all gone. The very collapsing history of many nations repeating history over and over and over again.
If you want it *EARN-IT* without 'guns' (the only tool in governments toolbox).
Isn't this the usual situation between buyer and seller? Medicare is buying the drugs — paying all but a small percentage of the price — so why shouldn't they negotiate a price with the threat of not buying at all? Where else do we have government order goods or services without bidding or other ways of arriving at a price?
Less drugs invented? Feature not bug. At least as far as Medicare solvency goes.
Our current system of paying pretty much whatever the drug company wants to charge has resulted in dramatic increases in research and development. This has resulted in more new high-priced drugs than we are able or willing to pay for. So, maybe a slow down in R&D is appropriate. If people had to pay their own way for these outrageously expensive drugs, I think research and development would’ve slowed a long time ago.
+1000000; The most just system ever is *EARN* and trade. Today's 'Guns' (gov-guns) literally pollutes that into STEALING when the government very purpose was to ensure Liberty and Justice for all.
What to do when government starts working for criminals instead.
Wasn't it the Republican Bush Jr. who removed ability to negotiate drug prices when Medicare part D was enacted? Not only that but thousands (or more?) Americans buy drugs in Mexico and Canada because those nations DO negotiate prices. Just like most successful businesses when finding supplies and suppliers.