In other countries, the government negotiates with pharmaceutical companies directly to set a single market price. In the U.S., things are not so simple
American pharmaceutical companies are reluctant to negotiate, claiming lower prices would cut off the funding for product development and future innovation.
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Last year, Kevin Schulman, a health economist at Stanford Graduate School of Business and Stanford School of Medicine, taught a course on health information technology and strategy. Sitting in on the class was Iselin Dahlen Syversen, the head of the Norwegian government department that works with pharmaceutical companies to set drug prices.
“We were talking about some regulatory thing,” Schulman recalls, “and she couldn’t take it anymore. She shouted out, ‘Why doesn’t your government just fix this?’”
That is far more easily said than done. The drug pricing system in the United States is so byzantine, it’s nearly incomprehensible, and it results in drugs costing two to nearly four times as much as they do in Canada, Mexico, and many European countries. Syversen had come to America on a fellowship to learn about best practices she could take back home — “I told her that was a mistake,” Schulman jokes — but it turns out Norway has far more to teach Americans.
To see just how much the U.S. could learn, Syversen and Schulman teamed up with two colleagues at Harvard Medical School, Aaron S. Kesselheimopen in new window and William B. Feldmanopen in new window, to do a comparative study of drug price negotiations in the U.S., Norway, and six other countries in Europe and North America. Their research included in-depth interviews with nine negotiators to get an inside look at how different healthcare systems (including Veterans Affairs) approach pharmaceutical companies at the bargaining table.
Their findings detail a stark difference in approach. In other countries, the government negotiates with pharmaceutical companies directly to set a single market price. In the U.S., things are not so simple. “We have this incredibly complicated way we buy drugs,” Schulman says. “Most of the time, the government programs and the way we pay for drugs creates a huge incentive to increase prices.”
This piece originally appeared in Stanford Business Insights from Stanford Graduate School of Business. To receive business ideas and insights from Stanford GSB click here: (To sign up: https://www.gsb.stanford.edu/insights/about/emails)