Can Government Price Negotiation Work for the Medicare Drug Benefit?

Should the government negotiate the prices of pharmaceuticals covered by the new Medicare Part D prescription drug benefit? The incoming Democratic leadership in Congress has made Medicare price negotiation a top policy priority, but controversy rages over precisely what that might entail and whether it would reduce drug costs in Part D. Supporters of government negotiations point to the success of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) in obtaining low prices, but critics argue that Medicare would not do better than the current system of allowing private drug plans to make their best deal.

Johns Hopkins professor Gerard Anderson will outline Democratic policy options and draw upon lessons from government price negotiations in other countries. Michael Valentino, pharmacist and chief consultant to the VA’s Pharmacy Benefits Management Strategic Healthcare Group, will explain the VA system of price negotiation. Mark McClellan, former administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, will address the success of private plan negotiations in Part D. Joseph Antos, a former Congressional Budget Office official, will raise concerns about the feasibility of drug price negotiations and likely budget savings.

About the Author

 

Joseph
Antos

  • Mr. Antos's research focuses on the economics of health policy—including Medicare and broader health system reform, health care financing, health insurance regulation, and the uninsured—and federal budget policy. He has written and spoken extensively on the Medicare drug benefit and has led a team of experienced independent actuaries and cost estimators in a study to evaluate various proposals to extend health coverage to the uninsured. His work on the country’s budget crisis includes a detailed plan to achieve fiscal stability and economic growth developed in conjunction with AEI colleagues.  


    Joseph Antos is also a commissioner of the Maryland Health Services Cost Review Commission and a health adviser to the Congressional Budget Office.  Before joining AEI, Mr. Antos was Assistant Director for Health and Human Resources at the Congressional Budget Office.




    Watch Mr. Antos in an interview with Bill Erwin of the Alliance for Health Reform on "Will Health Reform Reduce the Federal Deficit?"

    nullFollow Joseph Antos on Twitter

  • Phone: 202-862-5938
    Email: jantos@aei.org
  • Assistant Info

    Name: Catherine Griffin
    Phone: 2028625920
    Email: catherine.griffin@aei.org

 

John E.
Calfee
  • Economist John E. Calfee (1941-2011) studied the pharmaceutical industry and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), along with the economics of tobacco, tort liability, and patents. He previously worked at the Federal Trade Commission's Bureau of Economics. He had also taught marketing and consumer behavior at the business schools of the University of Maryland at College Park and Boston University. While Mr. Calfee's writings are mostly on pharmaceutical markets and FDA regulation, his academic articles and opinion pieces covered a variety of topics, from patent law and tort liability to advertising and consumer information. His books include Prices, Markets, and the Pharmaceutical Revolution (AEI Press, 2000) and Biotechnology and the Patent System (AEI Press, 2007). Mr. Calfee wrote regularly for AEI's Health Policy Outlook series. He testified before Congress and federal agencies on various topics, including alcohol advertising; biodefense vaccine research; international drug prices; and FDA oversight of drug safety.

AEI on Facebook