Prescription drugs are unaffordable for millions of people. With the right policy solutions, we can get back on the path to affordability.
The high cost of prescription drugs is making them unaffordable for patients.
In a free market, sellers compete on price, and buyers choose the lowest priced good that meets their needs. It’s a fundamental law of economics.
But in the real world, this law sometimes crumbles — especially in America’s prescription drug market.
Drugmakers rarely compete on price. This is one reason why the U.S. spent over $633 billion on prescription drugs last year.
Compared with other high-income countries, the U.S. has the highest per capita prescription drug spending.
Starting in 1990, a series of policy changes undermined any leverage buyers had to help rein in rising costs.
This combination of policies has allowed manufacturers to raise prices relentlessly without fear of political or market consequences.
The broken prescription drug market makes health care unaffordable for millions. But we have some policy options, including:
Humira has a list price of $7,000. By switching members to the biosimilar, we lowered costs for our members and employer groups. Congress should make it easier for doctors to use biosimilars with their patients.
The prescription drug market is broken.
It’s time for our lawmakers to have some serious conversations about solutions. Patients deserve access to effective drugs at prices we all can afford.