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Medicine United States Businesses

Why Prescription Drugs Cost So Much More in America (ft.com) 348

The US spends more per capita on medication than anywhere else in the world. It's a key electoral issue. From a report on Financial Times (paywalled): All over the world, drugmakers are granted time-limited monopolies -- in the form of patents -- to encourage innovation. But America is one of the only countries that does not combine this carrot with the stick of price controls. The US government's refusal to negotiate prices has contributed to spiralling healthcare costs which, said billionaire investor Warren Buffett last year, act "as a hungry tapeworm on the American economy." Medical bills are the primary reason why Americans go bankrupt. Employers foot much of the bill for the majority of health-insurance plans for working-age adults, creating a huge cost for business.

In February, Congress called in executives from seven of the world's largest pharmaceutical companies and asked them: why do drugs here cost so much? The drugmakers' answer is that America is carrying the cost of research and development for the rest of the world. They argue that if Americans stopped paying such high prices for drugs, investment in innovative treatments would fall. President Trump agrees with this argument, in line with his "America first" narrative, which sees other countries as guilty of freeloading. For the patients on the trip, the notion is galling: insulin was discovered 100 years ago, by scientists in Canada who sold the patent to the University of Toronto for just $1. The medication has been improved since then but there seems to have been no major innovation to justify tripling the list price for insulin, as happened in the US between 2002 and 2013.

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Why Prescription Drugs Cost So Much More in America

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  • Because we can (Score:5, Informative)

    by Pascoea ( 968200 ) on Friday September 20, 2019 @01:30PM (#59216912)

    In February, Congress called in executives from seven of the world's largest pharmaceutical companies and asked them: why do drugs here cost so much? The drugmakers' answer is because we can, and those bonuses aren't going to pay themselves.

    Went ahead and fixed that for ya.

    • by Z00L00K ( 682162 )

      And the linked article is paywalled as well.

      • by Merk42 ( 1906718 )
        Because being so greedy as to make your products so expensive that people go bankrupt, is totally the same as asking for any payment for your work.
      • by Pascoea ( 968200 )
        Yeah, that's why I had to paraphrase the quote...
    • Yup! Thank you!
    • The FT? Weren't those the very same doods who applauded what a great job on China's economy Mao was doing, and years later we learned that 30 million to 40 million starved from Mao's great job! Great report, FT!
      And back in 2001, FT said less than 1 million jobs had been offshored from the USA, quite the lowball figure and wrong again, as it has been on many an occasion --- the FT, not a trustworthy source . . .
    • Why aren't the members of Congress questioning themselves. Legislators are protected from their choice due to their generous lifetime health care. This model is allowed to exist because the wealthy are highly invested in pharmaceuticals. They make money on these outrageous costs. It basically becomes a tax on the poor and elderly.

  • In Switzerland... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Kokuyo ( 549451 ) on Friday September 20, 2019 @01:37PM (#59216944) Journal

    ...they're telling us exactly the same thing. Fact is they're just skimming the market potential. They set the price at a level that brings them the most profit.

    If they didn't have monopolies, that wouldn't be much of an issue.... but reality is what it is: Innovation for big pharma often means buying a small, new company and then raising the price of that product as far as it will go. I have doubts that the big companies really innovate. Innovation is just so much harder than buying out small "competition" and cornering markets.

  • by Thelasko ( 1196535 ) on Friday September 20, 2019 @01:40PM (#59216956) Journal
    This only discusses patented drugs. However, generic drugs are extremely expensive in the US as well. How do you explain that?
    • by skids ( 119237 )

      This only discusses patented drugs. However, generic drugs are extremely expensive in the US as well. How do you explain that?

      Easy: Use the old well-worn free market mantra: "charge what the market will bear." (The consequences be damned.)

      • This only discusses patented drugs. However, generic drugs are extremely expensive in the US as well. How do you explain that?

        Easy: Use the old well-worn free market mantra: "charge what the market will bear."

        That doesn't explain why the market will bear a high price for a name brand drug when there's an identical lower price generic on the same shelf.

        I've got a two explanation. First part is that the patient likely isn't paying the cost difference and so doesn't really care about price. The second part is that we seem to be trained or wired to believe a name brand product is better than a generic. I don't know about you but when I'm buying pain medicine, I still have to pause between Motrin and generic Ibuprofi

    • As I understand it sometimes the FDA hands out monopolies on drugs long out of patent. On theory because otherwise it wouldn't be made, in reality due to rampant corruption on all levels.

    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      This only discusses patented drugs. However, generic drugs are extremely expensive in the US as well. How do you explain that?

      The materials for both are exactly the same and cost exactly the same, so the generic can charge less and still make an ass ton of profit while the name-brand is making a metric ass ton of profit.

    • For alot of the prescription drugs that are generic there are actually only a one or two companies that actually make them. They can increase the price because of lack of competition and knowing that either the government or personal insurance pays the high cost.
      For an example I got vitamin b prescribed to me for 45 days. The pharmacy wanted after a little over $5 after my rather poor prescription insurance paid the majority. Or I could just walk down the near-by aisle and get a bottle of 100 for under
    • by pesho ( 843750 )
      1. Cartel: it is pretty well documented how generic drug manufacturers are talking to each other to set similar pricing and divide the market so they do not have to compete. 2. "Regulation": FDA grants market exclusivity to companies that do "modern" clinical testing on old drugs. So investors buy a small manufacturer, carry a meta study on publicly available clinical data and suddenly nobody else can compete with them. No R&D, no risk (the drug has been safely used for decades and patients have no al
    • by G00F ( 241765 )

      There is a missunderstanding about generics, that most dont understand (I don't fully grasp and or remember it all either)

      but basically, After $X years company is requested to make their own generics, after $Y more years the market is open to all companies.

      Considering it takes years to discover drug, then ~8-10 years to go through FDA testing/approval., they have 10-12 years to sell product. No big deal?

      But then drug makers have done shifty things my patenting something else about the drug or making a minor

  • by chipperdog ( 169552 ) on Friday September 20, 2019 @01:48PM (#59217014) Homepage
    GREED
  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday September 20, 2019 @01:52PM (#59217032)
    Better question, how much would you pay for your wife, child or husband to live? Don't answer, I just want you to think of the number.

    Now understand this: Somewhere out there is a Venture Capitalist working to answer that very question. They're buying up all the companies that make life saving drugs. Heart medication, insulin, Chemotherapy. They can pay insane amounts for the companies.

    They can also make it difficult if not impossible for competitors to make it to market. It's cheap to manufacture insulin, it's not cheap to _start_ manufacturing insulin. They can freeze out any competitor from the investor cash they'd need to get started by threatening to drop their prices below what the new competitor needs to be viable. Meanwhile if I'm an investor I can just invest in the insulin monopoly and see just as big a return without the risk.

    When you have control the supply of something people need to live you can do almost anything. Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals are not a free market by their very nature. It's time we stop pretending they are.
    • or our water supply up to private corporations (though many are trying to take control of the Water supply, especially out west). Food and water production are heavily regulated. Not just subsidized but _regulated_. You don't see the regulations as such because they're often enforced not with threats of jail time but by threatening to pull subsidies.
  • The answer should be obvious to anybody. This applies to medical care in the US as a whole, not just prescription drugs. Asking such question and looking for "answers" is just a distraction.
  • by belthize ( 990217 ) on Friday September 20, 2019 @02:00PM (#59217066)

    There's some truth to the R&D cost angle but it's over stated.

    The pharmaceutical industry gross profit for 2017 was around $900B.
    The global pharmaceutical industry R&D budget was around $160B. A a percentage of prescription sales (some gross profit comes from other sources like licensing) R&D expenses were 20%.

    So yes R&D is a notable contributor but it does not fully explain recent rises in prescription costs. Research costs have been increasing at 3%/year, much less than the rate of increase in prescription costs.

    https://www.prescouter.com/201... [prescouter.com]

    So it's likely true that the US is bearing the brunt of R&D costs but it's also true that the US is bearing the brunt of the industry's 20+% profit margin, which is on top of skyrocketing salaries.

    • So it's likely true that the US is bearing the brunt of R&D costs but it's also true that the US is bearing the brunt of the industry's 20+% profit margin, which is on top of skyrocketing salaries.

      I'd agree, and just note that all those things are actually what drives innovation. Without decent profit people will invest time and capital elsewhere I bet.

  • Because we can... Seriously, we pay more for stuff because we have more to spend and the market can charge more.

    The question you should ask yourself is if this is how it should be or not?

    I think of it this way. Because we pay more, we fund the R&D work that goes into development of new drugs and treatments, which ends up, eventually, improving the available treatments for the whole world. So, we pay because we are prosperous and the world benefits from this, with better care.

    So, I'm not sure that c

  • by olddoc ( 152678 ) on Friday September 20, 2019 @02:05PM (#59217110)
    Epinephrine is a simple, natural molecule that is found in all humans and is not patent-able. Due to the FDA and ridiculous USA protections there is no competition in the market for $0.10 of epinephrine in a $0.20 syringe with a $0.01 spring. If there was a competitive market, there would be a dozen companies selling epinephrine emergency injectors for $5 each and making a ton of profit. Patent protection has gone way too far. There are many more examples including the abuse of "process patents" Oh, we lost the patent on XYZ drug? Too bad we have the patent on the way to synthesize it so no generics can be made for another 10 years!
    • If there was a competitive market, there would be a dozen companies selling epinephrine emergency injectors for $5 each and making a ton of profit.

      Until that one cent spring they are using doesn't work properly for a few people who die because of it, and the heirs go after the company for a few millions of dollars.

      There are generic EpiPens, by the way.

  • by hawk ( 1151 ) <hawk@eyry.org> on Friday September 20, 2019 @02:09PM (#59217136) Journal

    As a sometimes Economics professor, I have a somewhat different approach.

    The problem is not the simplistic "they charge $100 for a pill that costs less than a dollar to make", as that ignores the billions that go into figuring out *how* to do so.

    The problem is bargaining asymmetries. It makes *sense* to sell to the foreign country at price lower than the US price, but higher than the marginal cost of production, if the alternative is not selling there.

    The result, though, is the US bearing the entire development cost.

    If the rules are changed, not to mandate specific pricing, but to require the same wholesale pricing at the same volume (and larger) be available in the US as in any deal with any foreign country, the Economics change. The foreign market no longer has the manufacturer over the "take it or leave it" barrel, as the "sweetheart" deal now reduces US prices.

    Simply mandating prices doesn't work; the only price control I can name that ever worked was WWII in the US--and even the, as it was part of the war effort in a popular control. Aside from that, we have evidence of price control failures for millennia, going back to Rome, and some evidence it was tried and failed by the Sumerians before that.

  • The reason that drug companies charge so much for medicine in the US, is because nobody seems to want to stop them doing so. They like doing it, because they like getting rich. It is basically, in the case of many medications, a licensed monopoly. The case of insulin is an interesting one. For a person with Type 1 diabetes, insulin is literally a life saving medication. Yet, the price is massive. On diabetic forums, there are reports of examples of people who die, because they cannot afford their insulin. E
  • by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Friday September 20, 2019 @02:13PM (#59217162) Homepage

    "America is carrying the cost of research and development for the rest of the world"

    So they want to give y'all that good old martyr complex. That's nice. But pharma companies aren't hurting. Just to take a single example, in 2018 Bayer made a profit of EUR 1.7 billion on a turnover of EUR 39.6 billion. That's the profit after deducting everything they could think of - including all of that research. This result led to earnings per share of EUR 5.94, and a record share dividend of EUR 2.80. Other pharma companies are faring similarly well. What governments forget, both for copyrights and for patents, is that these are artificial, government granted monopolies. As such, the government has every right to expect tit-for-tat. We give you this monopoly. Abuse it too far, and we'll declare your drug to be generic. This is particularly true for widely used items like insulin or epi-pens.

    The other half of the coin is cold-blooded accountancy. A human life has a value that is not infinite . No, saving your sick baby is not worth $1 trillion. Not $1 billion. Possibly not even $10 million. Considered in cold blood, a human life has a price, a maximum amount that society should expend to save it. This should be fine-tuned by actuarial tables, and even considerations of the person's individual situation. Saving a 1-year-old is worth more than saving a 90-year-old. Saving a productive member of society is worth more than saving a druggie. Cold-blooded fact, because resources are not infinite.

    Consider drugs for rare diseases, and - fairly new - personalized drugs (i.e., treatments tailored to you as an individual). On a per-case basis, these drugs are horrendously expensive. Many of them should not be funded by the public or by insurance, because the cost is disproportionately high. If the person can pay privately, or if charity will bear the costs - that's fine. But society (either as a single-payer system, or in the form of insurance) must sensibly limit expenditures. This would also help to limit profiteering by the drug companies.

  • other wealthy countries spend half or less than what US does.

  • People pushing Medicare drug negotiation need to realize that the only leverage the government has against the manufacturer during negotiation is to not cover drugs that don't offer a lower price at the bargaining table. So if it happens, don't be surprised when your favorite pricey highly-advertised brand-name drug is no longer covered by Medicare.

    I would be interested in seeing Medicare refuse to cover any drug that is advertised on TV. It avoids the free-speech problem of banning ads, avoids the stupid

  • It's not that some meds are somewhat more expensive in the US. Even plain vanilla meds like zit cream or analgesic cream are 10x more expensive in the USA than in Europe. These meds have been around forever. Their R&D cost has long been amortized & depreciated. I blame the insurance companies for basically obfuscating the costs. If consumers had to pay out of pocket for their meds they would raise bloody hell and the system would change. I blame health insurance for all the ills of the US Healthcare
  • Consider those insulin prices. Why doesn't someone start an insulin manufacturing plant, making dirt-cheap insulin and undercut big pharma? It's not patents on insulin stopping them.

    Consider the EpiPen prices. Epinephrine is cheap, syringes are cheap. But EpiPens cost a fortune. The manufacturer has a patent on the autoinjector, not on Epinephrine or syringes. People pay so that they don't have to mess with loading a syringe or dosages. Someone could create a non-infringing autoinjector and undercut them.

    T

  • Sorry, charlie, but we've heard and dispensed with these Wall Street excooooses long ago: ultra-concentration of ownership is why they get away with it - - the owners of the biopharmaceuticals own the top banks, and just about everything else. I forget what the exact medical ailment was - - believe it was hepatitus, but pills against it back in 2016 cost $40 a pop in Pakistan and India, and $84,000 in America - - quite the ultra-writeup . . .

    Recommended study: The Myth of Capitalism by Jonathan Tepp
  • Health care is about healing, and yet a for-profit medical industry is about exploiting and predation of the weak (or sickly or elderly etc). It's impossible for a for-profit health care system not to be inferior and sociopathic in actual operation.

Math is like love -- a simple idea but it can get complicated. -- R. Drabek

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