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Making a Killing champions greater cooperation between wealthy and poor nations to restrict the trade in counterfeit pharmaceuticals.
Michael Greve is a first-rate constitutional scholar, so I take on his argument that “the states will lose on Medicaid” with some trepidation. I’m no lawyer, so I’m in no position to quarrel with his legal argument. But I do know a thing or two about...
How a brave regulator stemmed the tide of counterfeit drugs that threatened Nigeria.
Unless the United States is prepared to reverse the trend, we must face the fact that China will rule the skies over the Pacific--just as it is also poised to rule its waves at sea.
Drugs purchased by government aid agencies and NGOs using taxpayer dollars are often substandard and dangerous.
Large voter turnout for Iran's June 12 presidential election would be a double-edged sword for the country's hardline leader Ali Khamenei.
In the time it takes you to read this column, at least ten people in poor countries will die from diseases that are preventable and curable.
If the East African trade ministers meeting today care about their people, rather than the narrow interests of theirpharmaceutical industry, they should all agree to tariff removal.



