If Politics Got Real
by William Greider
The Nation magazine, November 13, 2000
If politics got real ... the debate over costly prescription
drugs up would turn to more fundamental solutions like breaking
13 the pharmaceutical industry's patent monopolies, which generate
soaring drug prices, and rewarding consumers for the billions
of tax dollars spent to develop new medicines. As a business proposition,
that sounds radical, but it would actually eliminate outrageous
profit-skimming at taxpayers' expense and liberate lifesaving
medicines from inflated prices so millions of people worldwide
could afford the health benefits.
At present, the government picks up the bill for nearly all
basic research and development, mainly through the National Institutes
of Health. Then private industry spends about $25 billion a year
on more R&D-essentially taking NIH discoveries the rest of
the way to market. The companies mostly do the clinical testing
of new compounds for safety and effectiveness, then win regulatory
approval for the new applications. This is one instance where
a bigger role for government, by taking charge of the scandalous
pricing system, could produce vast savings for the public-as much
as $50 billion to $75 billion a year.
The National Institutes of Health and independent scientists
working with NIH grants generally do the hard part and take the
biggest risks, yet there is no system for sharing the drug companies'
subsequent profits with the public treasury or for setting moderate
prices that don't gouge consumers. Instead, the drug industry
reaps revenues of $106 billion a year, claiming that it needs
its extraordinary profit levels in order to invest heavily in
research. The companies are granted exclusive patents on new products
for seventeen years (or longer if drug-company lobbyists persuade
Congress to extend them). Meanwhile, the manufacturers collect
royalties (and less profit) on the very same drugs under licensing
agreements with Europe, Canada and other advanced nations where
the governments do impose price limits. Thus, Americans pay the
inflated prices for new medicines their own tax dollars helped
to discover-while foreign consumers get the break.
Years ago, although reform was mandated by law, NIH abandoned
its efforts to work out a system for moderating US drug prices-mainly
because the industry refused to cooperate and had the muscle in
Congress to get away with it. Now that soaring prices have inflamed
public opinion again, Dean Baker of the Center for Economic and
Policy Research proposes a more radical solution. NIH should be
given control over all drug-research policy, Baker suggests, and
Congress should put up public money to cover the industry's spending
(probably less than $25 billion because marketing costs get mixed
into the research budgets as well as money spent to develop copycat
drugs, which are medically unimportant). The exclusive patent
system would be phased out, perhaps starting with cancer drugs
and other desperately needed medicines whose prices are too high
for poor nations to afford. For $25 billion or less in new public
spending, brand-name drugs would largely disappear, but, Baker
estimates, prescription costs for Americans would shrink by as
much as 75 percent overall.
A less drastic solution, suggested by James Love of Ralph
Nader's Consumer Project on Technology, would limit use of exclusive
patent rights and, if needed, compel drug-makers to grant royalty
licenses to other US companies to make and sell the same medicines,
thus fostering price competition. Competing companies would be
required to contribute a minimum percentage of revenues to R&D
to maintain research spending levels. The government could also
require companies to help fund government or university research.
The prescription-drug debate of Election 2000 is a long way
from either of these visions for reform, but events may lead the
public to take them seriously. Drug prices are inflating enormously.
If Congress fails to make it legal, the bootlegging of cheaper
medicines from Canada and other countries where the prices are
controlled is bound to escalate, and the present system might
break down from its own lopsided design. As a matter of public
values, the discovery of new health-enhancing medicines ought
to be shared as widely-and inexpensively-as possible, especially
since public money helped pave the way to these discoveries. Jonas
Salk never sought to patent his polio vaccine. He thought his
reward was knowing how greatly his work had advanced all
of humanity.
William Greider is The Nation national affairs correspondent.
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