Texarkana Gazette

Cheaper prescripti­ons? Then start bargaining

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President Joe Biden and Senator Bernie Sanders wrote in a recent op-ed that there’s “no rational reason” why Americans pay the highest prices in the world for prescripti­on drugs — almost three times more than their peers overseas, according to a recent analysis.

One rational reason is that, until recently, the U.S. was the only developed country that didn’t negotiate prices with the pharmaceut­ical industry. Lawmakers eager to lower Americans’ health-care costs should stay focused on getting those negotiatio­ns right.

In most rich countries, one buyer — the government — bargains with manufactur­ers for bulk purchases of medication­s. In the U.S., that task falls to the private sector, largely through pharmacy benefit managers.

PBMS bundle the buying power of employers and other providers of health benefits and negotiate on their behalf. The industry, which oversees prescripti­ons for 80% of the U.S. market, says it saves beneficiar­ies hundreds of billions of dollars a year.

Yet a growing body of evidence suggests that PBMS haven’t been doing their job — at least, not consistent­ly — and in some cases may be driving prices higher. For all their heft, PBMS still aren’t as effective as national government­s at delivering discounts.

Legislatio­n to address these problems — by increasing price transparen­cy, among other things — has advanced through several congressio­nal committees. It’s worth pursuing. Yet absent more evidence, it’s hard to see how these proposals will significan­tly lower drug prices.

Fortunatel­y, there’s a better approach. In 2022, Congress passed the Inflation Reduction Act, which authorized Medicare to bargain with pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers for the first time. The provision, starting with 10 medication­s and expanding gradually, is expected to save $100 billion over five years. Biden has proposed expanding the number of medication­s to 50.

Broadening negotiatio­ns is a good idea, so long as lawmakers recognize — and try to mitigate — the inevitable trade-offs. Drugmakers have voiced legitimate concerns that a single buyer will depress prices, discourage investment and stifle innovation.

Private forecasts about the impact of the IRA on drug developmen­t have been much higher than government estimates — and any one of those drugs could have improved the lives of millions of patients.

To their credit, drafters of the IRA included provisions that aimed to preserve incentives to innovate, largely by exempting most drugmakers from negotiatio­ns. If the government’s list expands, lawmakers will need to give thought to improving such protection­s.

For too long, the fragmented U.S. health-care system has inflated drug prices. A single government negotiator is a promising remedy. With the right incentives, lifesaving medication­s at reasonable prices should be an achievable goal.

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