Keep Big Government Out of Medicare Drug Pricing Negotiations


By Sally C. Pipes


The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM) recently released a report urging Congress to allow federal bureaucrats to negotiate Medicare drug prices directly with pharmaceutical companies. Currently, private insurance companies conduct these negotiations. The Academies believe the federal government could use its bulk purchasing power to obtain lower drug prices for Medicare beneficiaries.


NASEM is wrong. Giving the government negotiating authority would stifle innovation and reduce 42 million Medicare beneficiaries' access to medicine.


Congress created Medicare's "Part D" prescription drug benefit in 2003 to help seniors and disabled Americans afford their medications. Private insurers put together and sell these prescription drug plans, and the government subsidizes seniors' monthly premiums.


The program's "non-interference" clause strictly prohibits the government from negotiating drug prices with manufacturers and pharmacies. Congress believed, correctly, that private insurers could offer seniors a wider range of medicines at lower prices if federal bureaucrats were kept at bay.


These insurers have no choice but to aggressively negotiate with pharmaceutical manufacturers for discounts. If they don't, a rival insurer that obtained discounted drugs could use the savings to offer customers plans with lower deductibles, premiums, or co-payments.


This free-market competition has worked wonders for taxpayers and beneficiaries.


In its first decade of implementation, Part D cost $349 billion less than the Congressional Budget Office projected. Beneficiaries can buy a 2018 Part D plan for an average monthly premium of $33.50 -- a $1.20 decrease compared to 2017 plans. Beneficiaries in states like New York, Pennsylvania, and Ohio will enjoy premiums as low as $12.60 per month.


NASEM claims that government negotiators could drive drug prices even lower. That's contrary to what the CBO has been saying for more than 10 years. The non-partisan office explains that merely giving the government the ability to negotiate prices would "have a negligible effect on federal spending."


The CBO cautions that the only way government officials could lower drug prices is by refusing to cover medicines deemed too expensive.


Our veterans have experienced this rationing first-hand. The government negotiates drug prices for the Veterans Health Administration. The program's list of covered drugs excludes nearly one out of every five of the top 200 drugs included in Part D plans. Last year, the VHA only covered three out of 25 newly-approved, first-in-class therapies. The average Part D plan covered 20 of these medications.


If our government can't provide adequate drug coverage for the 9 million veterans in the VHA system, it cannot be trusted to do so for the 42 million Americans enrolled in Part D plans.


NASEM also believes that federal negotiations wouldn't discourage "the continuing development of new drugs."


Wrong again. It costs more than $2.6 billion to develop a new drug. If pharmaceutical companies weren't sure Part D plans would cover newly created medicines, they'd hesitate to invest in risky, high-cost research.


Nearly nine in 10 Part D patients are happy with their prescription drug coverage. This approval rating would plummet if the federal government took the place of private insurers and excluded the latest, most effective drugs from coverage.


Privately-negotiated Part D plans deliver low premiums and a diverse range of choices to beneficiaries. There's no need for Congress to fix a system that isn't broken.


Sally C. Pipes is President, CEO, and Thomas W. Smith Fellow in Health Care Policy at the Pacific Research Institute. Her latest book is The Way Out of Obamacare (Encounter 2016). Follow her on Twitter @sallypipes.

More Resources


06/17/2024
What Biden and Trump Must Say To Win the Debate
In just under two weeks, President Joe Biden and Republican challenger former President Donald Trump will square off in the first of two televised debates, with immense implications for the 2024 presidential election.

more info


06/17/2024
The Moment Everyone Realized Biden's Not Fit for Office
When the last Democrat to occupy the White House has to literally grab the current one because he notices he's had yet another senior moment and appears to be paralyzed on stage, it h...

more info


06/17/2024
Dems Split Over Biden's Asylum Order
Some feel limiting US-Mexico border crossings will protect the country, while others say 'it violates American values'

more info


06/17/2024
Biden's Border Order Is Kabuki
Don't be fooled; stronger action is available without more laws.

more info


06/17/2024
GOP Looks to Trump To Turn Up Heat on Tester & Brown
Former President Trump is turning up the heat on Sens. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) and Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) as Senate Republicans stand on the precipice of winning back the majority.

more info


06/17/2024
Historic Numbers of Black Voters Under 50 Giving Up on Dems
CNN's Harry Enten takes a look at polls showing black voters under 50 defecting from the Democratic Party.

more info


06/17/2024
How John Roberts Lost His Court
A self-described documentary filmmaker, trolling a gala dinner for a gotcha moment by engaging Supreme Court justices in conversation and surreptitiously recording their words, arguably scored with Justice Samuel Alito when he told her he shared their stated goal of returning "our country to a place of godliness."

more info


06/17/2024
Bar Group to Members: Don't Call Trump Verdict 'Partisan'
The Connecticut Bar Association is encouraging its members to speak out against public officials' criticism of the judicial system after former President Trump's recent convictions - and to perhaps think twice before offering their own opinions.

more info


06/17/2024
SCOTUS Controversy About More Than 'Appeal to Heaven'
Don't get caught up in the soap opera featuring the wife of a Supreme Court justice and the radical flags flying outside their home. The Alito controversy is about much more than a flag.

more info


06/17/2024
A Great Nothingburger: Rolling Stone's Hilarious Alito 'Scoop'
Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito and his wife, Martha-Ann, are as controversial as the Pledge of Allegiance, or the phrase printed on all U.S. currency, "In God we Trust." Which is to say, they are not controversial at all.

more info


06/17/2024
We Invited Butker To Speak. We Won't Bow to Cancel Culture
The demand that we weigh in on Harrison Butker's speech is exactly the kind of problem Benedictine College hopes to counteract in American culture.

more info


06/17/2024
The Resistance To a New Trump Admin Has Already Started
An emerging coalition that views Donald J. Trump's agenda as a threat to democracy is laying the groundwork to push back if he wins in November, taking extraordinary pre-emptive actions.

more info


06/17/2024
How Left-Wing Conspiracies Work
When we hear such things in the months to come, remember that these mythologies are usually a warning: what the left is alleging is, quite often, precisely what the left is already doing.

more info


06/17/2024
Republican Rats Return to Trump's Ship
Trump's visit to the US Capitol - where the Republicans he almost got killed three years ago fawned over him - would be funny if it weren't pathetic

more info


06/17/2024
Don't Fall for Biden's Nice Old Man Act
Biden might act like a doddering incompetent, look like a wax effigy and walk like a robot, but the president has the uncanny ability to exceed all expectations when it counts, politically.

more info



Custom Search

More Politics Articles:

Related Articles

Congress, Put Politics Aside and Pass USMCA


While Washington is often dominated with partisan gridlock, Congress can put politics aside and improve the everyday lives of Americans by passing a new United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), a trade deal that would replace the outdated North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).

Pelosi's Drug Bill Has a Huge, Hidden Price Tag


House Speaker Nancy Pelosi just released a bill that would allow government regulators to set artificially low prices for hundreds of medicines.

Missing in Action: How America Forgets MIA Day


Presidential proclamation, along with decrees by state governors, have served to establish September 20 as a national day of recognition for thousands of American service personnel who remain missing in action. Since World War II, over 81,000 Americans who served in that war, along with missing veterans from Cold War conflicts in Korea and Vietnam and the Persian Gulf, are among those for whom there is no final accounting. Indeed, this is nothing new, because since the dawn of history people have gone to war never to return—lost along with millions of civilians amid the debris of human conflicts from the Stone Age to the Information Age.

Old Wisdom Applied to Current Spending Proposals


This will sound like the start of a bad joke, but please bear with me: What do Everett Dirksen, Otto von Bismarck, H.L. Mencken, and "the Preacher" in the book of Ecclesiastes have in common?

Requiem for the Pro-Life Movement


Is the pro-life movement on Capitol Hill dead? If it is, it's congressional Republicans who have killed it.

Saudi Oil Attack Underscores Need for Energy Independence


When drones struck Saudi Arabia's oil processing facilities in September, 6 percent of global oil production went offline overnight.

House Drug Bill Would Undermine and Politiize Scientific Research


House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's Lower Drug Costs Now Act (H.R.3).imposes strict price controls, taxes, and regulations on biopharmaceutical companies. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office expects the measure to reduce the industry's revenues by $1 trillion over the coming decade.

It's Time to Turn the Prescription Drug Debate on its Head


Politicians typically blame drug companies for soaring pharmacy prices. But insurers, pharmacies, and other middlemen are the real driving force behind rising drug spending.

Trump Should Dust Off Last Year's Drug Reform Plan


Voters generally approve of Donald Trump's economic policies -- but give him low marks on health care, according to recent polls. The president, unsurprisingly, is grumbling. He recently chewed out Alex Azar, ordering his Health and Human Services secretary to make progress on reducing drug prices.

New Russia Sanctions Are Well-Intentioned -- But Poorly Targeted


Vladimir Putin is arguably the free world's most dangerous foe. In the past few years alone, he has invaded Ukraine, propped up murderous dictators in Syria and Iran, and even meddled in America's elections.

International Medical School Graduates Can Help Fight COVID-19


COVID-19 has disproportionately impacted low-income and minority communities across the United States. In New York City, the epicenter of the pandemic, the poorest quarter of zip codes account for 36 percent of coronavirus cases. The wealthiest quarter, by contrast, account for less than 10 percent. African-Americans and Latinos are more likely to call these hardest-hit zip codes home.

Embrace Free Trade to Defeat COVID-19


At the 73rd World Health Assembly, public health officials from dozens of countries gathered virtually to discuss strategies to defeat COVID-19.

American Biotech Breaks Through on COVID-19


Biotech companies are racing to develop a coronavirus vaccine. Massachusetts-based Moderna, for instance, recently received FDA approval to begin Phase II clinical trials of its experimental COVID-19 vaccine. Pfizer, Novartis, and dozens of lesser-known innovators are close behind.

Renewables Alone Can't Save the Planet


Coalville wants to ditch fossil fuels. The Utah city has pledged to draw its electricity from 100 percent renewable sources by 2030. From California to New Hampshire, dozens of cities have set similar goals.

Gutting Patent Protections Won't Cure COVID-19


To ensure that coronavirus vaccines and treatments are "available at a price affordable to all people," Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky and several other House Democrats recently proposed a radical solution to the coronavirus pandemic -- commandeer any lifesaving, yet-to-be-created vaccine and allow the government to set "reasonable" prices.