Eakinomics: The
Drug Reform Dance Continues
As Congress approaches a vote on H.R. 3, Speaker Pelosi’s “Elijah E.
Cummings Lower Drug Costs Now Act,” the world is awash with information
regarding approaches to lowering prescription drug costs. In addition to a
rich archive of material in AAF’s Drug Pricing Clinic, Tara O’Neill
Hayes has a new, convenient comparison of the major
legislative vehicles.
Last night, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released its cost estimate of H.R. 3, which
contained three important insights. First, you can indeed reduce federal
spending if you combine price-fixing with extortion – something the authors
of H.R. 3 call “Fair Negotiation.” CBO puts reduced spending at $456
billion. Second, given that the Medicare Trust Fund is on track to hit zero
in 2026 and that the social safety net is, in general, facing a financial
crisis, you might think that these budgetary savings would be used to shore
up the health care future for seniors.
Think again. H.R. 3 as a whole reduces the federal deficit by $5 billion
over the 10-year budget window; that is, the authors manage to spend nearly
every penny on new benefits that will be just as unaffordable as the old
benefits in a few short years. Cognitive dissonance alert! Democrats will
use the phrase “fiscally responsible” in association with this bill. The
only thing funnier is the new season of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.
The third lesson is that you price-fix the domestic drug market at your
peril. Failing to provide adequate reimbursements means that capital
markets will stop funding drug development and innovation. But how big is
the impact? CBO opines, “approximately 8 fewer drugs would be
introduced to the U.S. market over the 2020-2029 period, and about 30 fewer
drugs over the subsequent decade. (Under current law, the Food and Drug
Administration approves, on average, about 30 new drugs annually,
suggesting that about 300 drugs might be approved over the next 10 years.)
The estimates are in the middle of the distribution of possible
outcomes, in CBO’s assessment, and are uncertain.”
The uncertainty is real. Looking at the same data, the administration
emphasized in its Statement of Administration Policy (SAP), “The
Council of Economic Advisers finds that H.R. 3’s price controls would
affect as much as one third of drugs under development, meaning that out of
300 projected new medicines that would otherwise be approved over 10 years
by the Food and Drug Administration, 100 could be severely delayed or never
developed.”
That’s quite a difference, and both are within the range of plausible
outcomes. The bottom line, however, is that the
SAP concludes, “If H.R. 3 were presented to the President in its
current form, he would veto the bill” largely because the cost of lost
innovation “on individuals and their families will be significant,
personal, and long-lasting.” (There’s also that pesky Constitution; “this
price-fixing mechanism places price controls on drugs available under
Medicare and commercial plans, and imposes devastating fines on
manufacturers, raising serious concerns under the Fifth Amendment’s Takings
Clause and Eighth Amendment’s Excessive Fines Clause.”)
Importantly, the president did not slam the door on the legislative
progress. The SAP emphasizes, “The Administration strongly
prefers the Prescription Drug Pricing Reduction Act of 2019, which was reported
out of the Senate Finance Committee on a bipartisan basis. This legislation
offers a sound approach to delivering relief to seniors from high
prescription drug costs while safeguarding the ongoing development of
life-saving and sustaining medicines. Additionally, H.R. 19, the Lower
Costs, More Cures Act, shares many of the same bipartisan elements of the
Prescription Drug Pricing Reduction Act and is also a far better approach
to lowering drug prices and discovering life-saving cures than H.R. 3.”
The drug reform dance continues.
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