• Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance news and updates directly to your inbox.

Top News

What’s Your Plan For Financial Security In Retirement?

December 2, 2025

10 Essential Items for Your Winter Emergency Car Kit

December 2, 2025

Workers Reconsider Career Priorities Amid Looming Layoffs, Rising Costs

December 2, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • What’s Your Plan For Financial Security In Retirement?
  • 10 Essential Items for Your Winter Emergency Car Kit
  • Workers Reconsider Career Priorities Amid Looming Layoffs, Rising Costs
  • 10 Risks of Treating AI Ethics as an Afterthought
  • Access a Lifetime of Skills Development for Just $18
  • Steve Jobs’ 7 Rules For Success and Leadership
  • Employees Are Secretly Using This Hack to Do Less Work
  • 3 Tips To Help Prepare You For Retirement
Tuesday, December 2
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Indenta
Subscribe For Alerts
  • Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans
Indenta
Home » Why Medicare Is Right To Negotiate Drug Prices
Retirement

Why Medicare Is Right To Negotiate Drug Prices

News RoomBy News RoomAugust 30, 20231 Views0
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email Tumblr Telegram

The Biden Administration has announced its list of the first 10 drugs that will be subject to price negotiations, a step allowed for the first time when Congress passed last year’s Inflation Reduction Act. The Pharmaceutical Manufacturers’ Association (PhRMA), the main drugmaker lobby, blasted the law. No surprise there. But its reasoning is evidence of how perverse the US health system is.

PhRMA objects to Congress “giving a single government agency the power to arbitrarily set the price of medicines with little accountability, oversight or input from patients and their doctors.”

And the drug industry is mounting a furious campaign to kill the idea before the lower prices begin to kick in in 2026. That includes efforts to lobby Congress to repeal the 2022 law and convince the courts to overturn the law.

Negotiations Are Not Price Controls

But wait a minute. This isn’t like price controls where government tells a supermarket how much it can charge for a banana. Most economists agree that such efforts to cap market prices usually are doomed to fail.

When it comes to drugs, the government agency, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), isn’t acting as a regulator. It is a consumer. And not just any consumer. It is by far the biggest purchaser of prescription drugs on the planet.

Medicare spent more than $200 billion, before rebates, on Part D drugs in 2021, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. And it paid an additional $40 billion on Part B injectable drugs, such as anti-cancer infusions, which are not included in the price negotiation program.

HHS says the 10 drugs for which Medicare wants to negotiate prices represented about $50.5 billion in gross covered drug costs last year, again not counting rebates.

What Buyer Wouldn’t Use Its Market Power?

In any world but the one the US health care system lives in, any buyer that spends $200 billion annually on a product would be negligent if it did not use its market power to negotiate prices. I imagine, for example, that Pfizer
PFE
gets a pretty good deal from makers of the test tubes it purchases in bulk.

Keep in mind that Congress limited price negotiations only to certain drugs with some important characteristics in common. They have been on the market for many years, have no generic competitors, and thus are very expensive. One reason for the lack of competition: The big drugmakers have found ways to game the patent system to block lower-cost alternatives.

Traditional fee-for-service Medicare sets payment rates for nearly everything else it buys, including the services of physicians, hospitals, nursing homes, physical therapists, and home health care. Really, everything except drugs and devices.

But for six decades, Congress has prohibited Medicare from negotiating drug prices. Instead, a drugmaker sets a price and the government blindly pays it. In fact, Medicare generally is left with a binary choice: Either pay what the drugmaker demands or don’t pay at all.

Indirect Help For Beneficiaries

That’s one reason why drug prices are so much more expensive in the US. For example, the median price for the blood thinner Eliquis, one of the drugs on Medicare negotiation list, is $440 in the US but $96 in Germany and $80 in Greece. These are not market prices because, with no competitors, there is no true market for these drugs

Medicare beneficiaries, meanwhile—the consumers of the drugs—have no ability to negotiate either. True, some may receive discounts at the discretion of the manufacturer. But generally, they must pay out of pocket a share of whatever Medicare pays. The amount depends on a wide range of factors but most will pay something, based on the inflated prices the companies charge Medicare. HHS estimates Medicare beneficiaries pay about $3.4 billion out-of-pocket annually for the 10 drugs subject to negotiation.

Who Really Does Drug Research?

PhRMA and its supporters say high US drug prices are a major incentive to do the difficult work of drug research, which often results in failure. If we are not well compensated for the rare winners, they say, we’ll develop fewer drugs.

I’m not convinced. Much cutting-edge, early stage research is done by small start-ups, which bear the financial risk, not by big pharma. The large firms often acquire successful drugs (or even buy the companies that make them) and act more as marketers than researchers.

And remember, Medicare is allowed to negotiate prices of drugs that have been on the market for years. The sellers have long since recouped their costs and made substantial profits. Besides, selling drugs is what these companies do, and they’ll keep doing it, even with more modest returns to their investors.

That isn’t to say price negotiations won’t change their business models somewhat. Drug makers may focus research on more specialized, even more costly drugs that are exempt from negotiations.

PhRMA argues the law permitting negotiations is unconstitutional, largely for technical administrative reasons. Relying on the now common practice of judge shopping, they brought their case in west Texas, where they are likely to get a sympathetic hearing. And the case is almost certain to land at the Supreme Court.

Whatever the outcome of the industry’s legal claims, its economic argument against drug price negotiations is weak.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

What’s Your Plan For Financial Security In Retirement?

Retirement December 2, 2025

3 Tips To Help Prepare You For Retirement

Retirement December 1, 2025

Caregiving Is The Crack In America’s Retirement And Longevity Planning

Retirement November 30, 2025

How Timing Impacts RMDs, Roth Conversions, And Year-End Taxes

Retirement November 29, 2025

Business Succession And Potential Gift Of Goodwill

Retirement November 28, 2025

5 Tips For A More Peaceful Thanksgiving With Aging Parents

Retirement November 27, 2025
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top News

10 Essential Items for Your Winter Emergency Car Kit

December 2, 20251 Views

Workers Reconsider Career Priorities Amid Looming Layoffs, Rising Costs

December 2, 20252 Views

10 Risks of Treating AI Ethics as an Afterthought

December 2, 20252 Views

Access a Lifetime of Skills Development for Just $18

December 2, 20252 Views
Don't Miss

Steve Jobs’ 7 Rules For Success and Leadership

By News RoomDecember 2, 2025

Entrepreneur Key Takeaways Steve Jobs believed that genuine passion is the foundation of meaningful work.…

Employees Are Secretly Using This Hack to Do Less Work

December 2, 2025

3 Tips To Help Prepare You For Retirement

December 1, 2025

Should You Split Your Car and Umbrella Insurance? Here’s What a CPA Says

December 1, 2025
About Us

Your number 1 source for the latest finance, making money, saving money and budgeting. follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

We're accepting new partnerships right now.

Email Us: [email protected]

Our Picks

What’s Your Plan For Financial Security In Retirement?

December 2, 2025

10 Essential Items for Your Winter Emergency Car Kit

December 2, 2025

Workers Reconsider Career Priorities Amid Looming Layoffs, Rising Costs

December 2, 2025
Most Popular

Boeing cuts 737 Max delivery forecast as production issues dent third-quarter results

October 25, 20237 Views

Entrepreneurs Are Flocking to Florida. Here’s When You Really Need to Go.

November 19, 20256 Views

How to Build a Side Hustle That Stands on Its Own — Without Burning Out

July 5, 20256 Views
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Dribbble
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2025 Inodebta. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.