Starting today, older Americans who are enrolled in Medicare Part D prescription drug plans and take Eliquis to prevent blood clots, Jardiance to lower blood sugar levels or one of eight other widely used drugs will save a combined $1.5 billion annually on out-of-pocket costs.
Medicare’s new price-negotiating authority stems from the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), which President Joe Biden signed into law in August 2022. Although the change is limited to Medicare, it represents a sea change in federal policy, which for decades has favored higher prices and the Big Medicine corruption that drives them.
Medicare’s new price-negotiating authority stems from the Inflation Reduction Act, which President Joe Biden signed into law in August 2022.
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Fortunately, the 10 drugs that become more affordable today represent only the first batch. The Trump administration has continued the law’s implementation and negotiated another 15 drug prices set to come online in 2027. In addition, the president has pursued one-off deals with manufacturers to offer “most favored nation” prices, using the threat of future tariffs as leverage, but these deals represent cost shifting more than cost savings.
The United States must do more to lower the cost of all prescription drugs, not just those made by manufacturers that curry favor with the president, and those costs need to be lowered for all Americans, not just those enrolled in Medicare. Otherwise, these price reductions will likely amount to just a drop in the bucket.
If Congress is serious about affordability, then members must eschew incremental changes — and instead eliminate the Big Medicine corruption that drives drug prices in the first place. Such changes would include a public Medicare Part D option as well as prohibitions on for-profit prior authorization and insurers owning pharmacies.
Since the Reagan administration, federal policymakers in both parties have embraced neoliberalism in health care (and other industries). This led to extreme market consolidation that benefited corporate monopolies at the expense of consumers, workers and taxpayers. Over a span that began with President Ronald Reagan’s second term and ended with Obama’s first, Congress passed four laws that gave Big Medicine — or private insurance conglomerates — incentives to raise drug prices.
In 1987, Congress unwisely decriminalized rebates paid by manufacturers to middlemen, disregarding accurate predictions of the corruption and higher prices that would follow if insurers and their affiliated pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) refused to cover certain drugs unless manufacturers paid up.
The creation of the Medicaid Drug Rebate Program in 1990 sought to contain Medicaid spending by requiring manufacturers to pay their “best” rebates to state and federal governments. But in 2000 a federal agency conceded in a memo that the “ability of the Medicaid rebates to contain costs is limited … because manufacturers can charge higher launch prices … to partially offset the Medicaid rebate.”
Neoliberalism led to extreme healthcare market consolidation that benefited corporate monopolies at the expense of consumers, workers and taxpayers.
In 2003, Congress created Medicare Part D, in which the federal government pays private insurers to provide prescription drug plans to older Americans. The law gave further incentives to private insurers to favor higher-priced drugs because rebates and patients’ out-of-pocket costs are based on list prices. As with the Medicaid Drug Rebate Program, manufacturers play along because public health care programs account for almost half of U.S. prescription drug spending.








