Douglas
Holtz-Eakin October 26, 2018
Yesterday the president personally rolled out an
“Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM)” regarding
“International Pricing Index Model for Medicare Part B Drugs.” This is DC-speak
for “this is what I plan to do about high drug prices.” The proposal is focused
on those Medicare drugs that are administered in hospitals and physician offices (“Part B,” as opposed to drugs bought at
the pharmacy, or “Part D”). Currently, physicians are reimbursed 106
percent of the average sales price (ASP) for drugs they administer to their
patients.
The core of the proposal is to make two changes.
First, hospitals, doctors, and other providers will be reimbursed a fixed fee
to cover the cost of administration. Notice that with the fixed fee (instead of
6 percent of the drug’s ASP), they have no incentive to seek higher drug
prices. Second, they will purchase the drugs from any drug vendor who wants to
get into the business of buying from pharmaceutical manufacturers and selling
to the hospitals and physicians. For every sale, the vendor will be paid 126 percent of the International Price Index
(IPI) for the drugs. Notice that the vendors have every reason to negotiate low
prices (and pocket the difference with the fixed 126 percent of the
IPI) with the manufacturers.
Now comes the important part. As a stylized
fact, drug prices are lower around the globe than in the United States; the price in the U.S. is about 180 percent of the average
overseas. So, taken at face value, the change is an enormous cut in prices in
the United States and pressure for negotiation down. What can a drug maker
do? Raise prices abroad to make up the difference.
The system — in principle — is supposed to move toward equalizing prices,
retaining sufficient profitability for pharmaceutical companies, and spreading
the (expensive) costs of research and development more equally across the
globe.
As an example, suppose a drug is sold for $200 in the United States and $100 abroad. In simple
terms, the drug company is paid $300 for the two
sales and Medicare is
paying $212 for the treatment. If the new reimbursement
is immediately applied, the hospital in the United States will get the fixed fee, say $12. The vendor will
get $126 so Medicare pays a total of $138 and saves money. The vendor will be willing to pay $126 or less to the drug company; let’s say they bargain down
to $120. Suddenly revenue to the drug manufacturer is only $220 instead of $300.
This cannot persist.
The Trump Administration’s dice roll is that the
drug manufacturer can get the international price and domestic price to
equalize at $150. If so, research and development can
continue as before. At that price, Medicare is paying only $201 (126 percent of $150 plus $12) — less than the $212 currently. And the
vendors can compete to be the supplier and keep the markup
from $150 to $189.
But that is a BIG if. Countries around the globe
have low prices because they have consistently told manufacturers to take the
low price or simply not be able to sell. That is one reason that 90 percent
of new drugs are available to U.S. patients, but only
two-thirds are available in the U.K., one-half in France and Canada, and one-third in Australia. If international prices don’t
change, the new formula will effectively import their price controls to the
Medicare system. With artificially low prices, the money will have to come from
somewhere else — commercial insurers in particular — or drugs will simply not
be available and U.S. patients will pay in the most fundamental terms.
There are a million other details and questions
about the proposed demonstration — measuring prices accurately, picking the
comparison countries, deciding which drugs will be in the demo, deciding which
areas will be in the demo, and so forth. Those will all matter.
This is a dramatic and risky proposal that needs a lot of specifics and details
to be truly assessed well.
https://www.americanactionforum.org/daily-dish/trumps-drug-price-initiative/#ixzz5VjcA2uvX
Follow @AAF on Twitter
https://www.americanactionforum.org/daily-dish/trumps-drug-price-initiative/#ixzz5VjcA2uvX
Follow @AAF on Twitter
No comments:
Post a Comment