iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Dean Baker

GET UPDATES FROM Dean Baker
 

Bernie Sanders Advocates a Free Market in AIDS Drugs

Posted: 05/07/2012 5:10 pm

Drugs are cheap. Patent monopolies are expensive. These are simple facts that everyone should know but for some reason few do.

The point here is simple; the vast majority of drugs are cheap to produce. Chain drug stores sell hundreds of generic drugs for $5-$7 per prescription. They can do this profitably because few drugs require expensive chemicals or manufacturing processes.

However, many brand drugs sell for hundreds or even thousands of dollars per prescription. This is due to the fact that drug companies have patent monopolies on these drugs. The government will arrest anyone who produces these drugs without the permission of the patent holder. Since drugs can be essential for people's health and/or life, if they can find a way to pay any price demanded by the drug companies, they will.

The higher prices due to patent monopolies are the reason that many people have difficulty paying for drugs. If all drugs were sold in a free market as generics, paying for drugs would not be a serious issue except for the very poor.

Of course, patent protection is the way in which drug companies finance their research. It costs a lot of money to research new drugs and then test them to establish their safety and effectiveness and bring them through the Food and Drug Administration's approval process.

However, there are more efficient mechanisms than patent monopolies to finance drug research. Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders is proposing one such mechanism, a prize system, be adopted to support research on AIDS drugs.

This system, which has been proposed by Nobel Prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz, among others, would set up a $3 billion-a-year prize fund to buy out existing and future patents for AIDS drugs. The fund would compensate drug companies and researchers for their work. The patent would then be placed in the public domain so the drug could be sold in the free market as a generic. AIDS patients would no longer have to struggle to find ways to pay for their drugs; they would be sold at prices comparable to other generic drugs.

This may sound like some big socialist give away, but only to people who have difficulty understanding economics. Under our current system, the government is giving something of enormous value to the drug companies: a patent monopoly. It will instead be buying out this monopoly and allowing drugs to be sold in a free market. As any economist can tell you, eliminating the monopoly and allowing a free market should lead to enormous savings.

In the case of AIDS drugs, much of the savings would accrue directly to the government, since the government pays for the bulk of AIDS treatment through Medicaid and other programs. The savings to the government from getting AIDS drugs at free market prices is likely to vastly exceed the money spent on the prize fund.

We will be able to put a more precise dollar amount on these savings if the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) can be persuaded to score Senator Sanders Bill (S.1138). There will be a hearing on this bill later in the month, which will include testimony from Professor Stiglitz, among others.

It is worth noting that a prize fund is not the only alternative to patent-supported research. The government already spends $30 billion a year supporting biomedical research through the National Institutes of Health (NIH). This research wins praise from across the political spectrum for its high quality and cost effectiveness.

While most NIH funding is devoted to basic research, there is no reason that this funding could not be expanded to cover the cost of developing and testing new drugs. The research could even be contracted out to existing drug companies or new ones who want to compete for funding.

The advantage of this system over a prize system is that all of the research findings would be immediately placed in the public domain. A patent prize system would encourage secrecy as companies try to prevent competitors from benefiting from their work. This secrecy has led to enormous waste and duplication in the research process.

By contrast, if the government were funding the research upfront it could make full disclosure of all research findings a condition of accepting the funding. Not only would any patents resulting from the research be placed in the public domain, but all the research that was relevant to drug's development would also be in the public domain.

We can argue over the relative merits of different alternatives to the system of patent-supported research in prescription drugs; however it is essential that we start this discussion. Currently we spend close to $300 billion a year for drugs that would cost around $30 billion in a free market. The $270 billion difference is approximately five times as large as what is at stake with extending the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy.

This is where the real money is and we should be talking about it. The hearing on Sanders' bill is a good start. CBO's scoring of the bill would be an excellent follow-up.

 

Follow Dean Baker on Twitter: www.twitter.com/DeanBaker13

FOLLOW BUSINESS
Drugs are cheap. Patent monopolies are expensive. These are simple facts that everyone should know but for some reason few do. The point here is simple; the vast majority of drugs are cheap to produc...
Drugs are cheap. Patent monopolies are expensive. These are simple facts that everyone should know but for some reason few do. The point here is simple; the vast majority of drugs are cheap to produc...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 27
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
12:45 PM on 05/08/2012
This is exactly why parallel imports and online pharmacies exist. Its because of greed. AIDS patients have to endure prescription drug costs of upwards of $1450/month in the US for some medications. I know people in the HIV community who order from http://www.aidsdrugsonline.net/ simply because they WOULD DIE if they didn't take their medications that they CANNOT AFFORD TO BUY because of patent pricing. Progressive countries like Australia are actually encouraging their citizens to parallel import meds that aren't covered, or are too expensive. Its this insistence that the patent monopolies actually save lives that is the problem. Lets face it people, NOTHING HAS BEEN CURED IN 30+ YEARS.

Gee I wonder if patent monopolies make it more profitable to treat than to cure???
10:45 AM on 05/08/2012
Whats ironic is that all of the capitalist republicans whose every other words are" free market" allow the drug companies a monopoly and to charge what they please.
10:09 AM on 05/08/2012
Sounds great but would it work? Or simply slow down the developments of further drugs? 3 billion sounds a lot but its still pocket change for some pharmas, and sometimes drugs developed during research could end up having other lucrative uses so I doubt big pharma will be happy providing all its findings and research upfront to the public for a fraction of what they could potentially make... How about getting rid of these unfair agreements that allows pharmaceuticals to ban cheap generics of their drugs in lucrative markets like the US? Atripla, the most commonly prescribed HIV medication with tremendous life saving results, costs somewhere between 2000 to 3500 dollars a month in the us... In Canada it's generic version, which is banned from the us market, costs several hundreds for a three month supply...same exact drugs costs pennies for patients in Africa and India. In other words American patients (and to a large extend our government) must pay markups at thousands of percentages for something that almost everyone else pays peanuts on... Just a little Food for thought here...
ThatsTheTheWayItIs
religion, ideology, partisanship are delusional
10:00 AM on 05/08/2012
Most research is done at universities, on taxpayer dollars.
Then the researchers take it private, patent it and extort the public who supported them.
The solution is to end patents, of all types.
10:03 PM on 05/08/2012
You must be a pirate... *Selfish*
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
10:04 PM on 05/11/2012
By grad students in indentured servitude.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:58 AM on 05/08/2012
"Bernie Sanders Advocates a Free Market in AIDS Drugs "

First thought: no way!

Second thought, after reading that he is advocating the government spending billions to purchase billions: the same. That's not a free market!!!
08:19 AM on 05/08/2012
Irony meter just exploded. Socialists endorsing market and profit motivated solutions.
07:24 AM on 05/08/2012
So from the article, our tax $ already subsidizes $30B for the pharm. companies. Seems like we already have some ownership of the patents they generate or should have. Now we are going to pay them up front money for an product untested in the marketplace to buy out the patent!

This is supposed to result in savings because the Federal Gov. spends $B on medicare and entitlements for health care paying full price for drugs we subsidized the development of...

The article goes on to say that potential savings of 90% of the amount the federal government spends on health entitlements for drugs......hmm

So Pharm. will want to participate to give up 90% of the profit? I don't think so , maybe for drugs whose market potential is not so good and the prize money would be another gift for them. Also how many corrupt legislators depend on big pharma profit for re-election? Reducing their profits is not conducive to campaign financing.

I don't expect this will go very far.....I would expect nothing less than convoluted logic like this to solve a huge drug cost problem..
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jack Gillespie
07:20 AM on 05/08/2012
Can we have free-market health care too? Where my health insurance isn't tied to my employer or the government?
12:09 AM on 05/08/2012
And if cannabis and opium and all the other medicinal herbs were growing near the back door like the weeds they are we would have little need for big pharma.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
King7David
Hoo Yah!!!!!!!
08:57 AM on 05/08/2012
Paul Paul, you hit the nail on the head. And these pharmaceutical companies know it....
10:29 PM on 05/07/2012
An idea who's time has come.....love you Senator Sanders.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
motoGpifupleez
watching with amusement
08:40 PM on 05/07/2012
The sad fact of this discussion is the rampant willful ignorance of the American people. Why should drug prices be cheaper here? Because our tax dollars paid for the bulk of the R&D, that's why. Americans are fed the lie that pharmaceutical corporations do all the financial heavy lifting but that is not true. The federal government does.
Americans fund it with their tax dollars and then allow themselves to be fleeced by the corporations. Pay twice and pat yourselves on the back for it.
04:04 AM on 05/08/2012
Most have no idea that over half of all new revolutionary drugs were developed at either government labs or universities funded by government grants and almost all basic research that leads to new medicines and other technologies is carried out at the tax payers expense. Check out Rx R&D Myths: The Case Against the Drug Industry’s R&D ‘Scare Card,’” July 2001. http://www.citizen.org/documents/ACFDC.PDF
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jean Clelland-Morin
religion / the Golden Rule
04:05 AM on 05/08/2012
Plus a lot of the resources go to institutions who use obsolete torture make-work on the powerless and voiceless for research.
oil patch
if you voted obama, you are to blame
08:07 PM on 05/07/2012
Donate your salary bernie, that's what's wrong with liberals...they want to impose their views on everyone and use your money to pay for it. They think they will decide what is right and balance the playing field for their cause of the moment.
photo
cornelison
College grad. Life-long liberal.
08:56 PM on 05/07/2012
Bernie Sanders is one of the few politicians who actually works in Washington. The Canadian government imposes laws on me. They actually had the gall to shove universal health care down my throat & I can't get enough of it.

I'm a dual citizen and I have no plans to go back to the USA - ever. Look how conservatives ruined the country, massive amounts of guns, no public health care & rampant intolerance.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
02:58 AM on 05/08/2012
The right would spin "can't get enough of it" into "Canadian taxpayer complains that his universal health care is inadequate."
photo
Lucas Mortinson
"Put that thing back where it came from or so help
07:41 PM on 05/07/2012
Republicans are all for free markets- so long as they don't take money away from the companies sponsoring their reelection campaigns.... hmmm... wonder where drug companies push most of their political donations to?
braq88
I think, therefore I am liberal.
06:22 PM on 05/07/2012
I think Sen. Sanders' proposal embodies the liberal movement's entire economic philosophy. We don't want to abolish capitalism. We want to reform it, so it benefits all of humanity rather than just the wealthy few. We want to make it so that anyone who is willing to work hard can enjoy the fruits of capitalism. We're not socialists. We're social capitalists.
photo
Lucas Mortinson
"Put that thing back where it came from or so help
07:43 PM on 05/07/2012
The people of Vermont should consider themselves lucky to be represented by Sanders. He is clearly one of the most intelligent people in government and moreover he uses that intelligence to benefit all- not just him and his own party (not hard when you're an independent to avoid party politics)
08:16 AM on 05/08/2012
That is correct.  We're not communists like the republicans want people to believe.
05:53 PM on 05/07/2012
What do you expect from a socialist. He wants the stockholders of the drug companies to come up with the investment necessary to develop the life saving drugs and then he wants them to sell it for no profit. Where is the incentive to invest?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
03:05 AM on 05/08/2012
Actually the investment big Pharma makes in lobbying is their most efficient method of finance. A majority of 535 congress members can be had for mere petty cash.