Drew Johnson | Posted: Sep 24, 2020 12:01 AM
The opinions expressed by columnists are their
own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Earlier this
month, President Trump signed an executive order to lower U.S. drug prices.
Cheaper
prescriptions might sound great -- but there's a catch. The president's order
would effectively impose European-style price controls on all drugs purchased
by Medicare. These price caps would cut off Americans' access to
soon-to-be-approved drugs and discourage the development of future treatments.
One of the
many things that make America great is our world-leading medical innovation. In
2019, American scientists were working on roughly 4,500 new medicines, more
than half of the 8,000 in development globally. The enormous size of our
biotech industry explains why we now have a staggering 40 Covid-19 vaccines in
clinical trials, less than a year after the virus first emerged.
This
research would not be possible without the brilliant scientists at
pharmaceutical companies of all sizes, from large multi-nationals to small
startups.
It also
wouldn't be possible without investors. It costs up to $2.6 billion and 10
years to develop a new drug. Less than 12 percent of potential treatments that
enter clinical trials ultimately succeed.
Investors
only take those enormous risks because of the potential rewards. At least in
America, investors know that if they successfully create an FDA-approved
medicine -- and that's a big if -- they'll be able to sell it for a fair price,
recoup their upfront costs, and potentially turn a profit.
That profit
motive propels science forward.
Price
controls would upend this system. If companies stand little chance of earning a
return on even the most successful, cutting-edge drugs, they'll struggle to
raise funding from investors, who will flee to safer alternatives.
This isn't
theoretical. Price controls have already gutted the research industry in other
developed countries. The U.S. Department of Commerce estimates that foreign
price controls reduce R&D spending by 11 to 16 percent annually.
And price
controls don't merely discourage R&D -- they also deter manufacturers from
launching their medicines in certain nations that offer unfairly low
reimbursements. Americans currently have access to 96 percent of the 98 new
cancer medicines launched since 2011. That's largely because Medicare, the
single largest U.S. insurer, pays market-based prices for medicines covers
virtually all FDA-approved drugs.
Patients in
other developed nations, by contrast, only have access to 51 percent of those
treatments.
House
Democrats tried to pass price controls last year. Their massive H.R. 3 package
would have tied all U.S. drug prices to the prices paid in Germany, the United
Kingdom, and other reference countries.
The
president wisely opposed those radical measures then. So it makes no sense for
him to reverse course, copy the Democrats' scheme, and impose it throughout
Medicare now.
President
Trump undoubtedly means well. But implementing price controls -- which are
proven to decrease the development of new medicines -- won't advance patients'
long-term interests. In fact, it will needlessly put countless American lives
at risk.
During the
greatest public health crisis in 100 years, America needs to encourage medical
innovation more than ever -- not embrace Europe's failed policies.
Drew Johnson
is a columnist and government watchdog who serves as a senior fellow at the
National Center for Public Policy Research.
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