Boston Herald

The government didn’t create vaccines

- by SAlly PiPeS Sally Pipes is president, CEO and Thomas W. Smith fellow in health-care policy at the Pacific Research Institute/InsideSour­ces.com.

President Biden recently toured a Pfizer plant in Kalamazoo, Mich., where workers are churning out millions of lifesaving COVID-19 vaccine doses.

During his remarks, he mentioned that in mid-February he had “toured the Vaccine Research Center at the National Institutes of Health … (where) I met world-class doctors, scientists, and researcher­s who were critical for discoverin­g the vaccines in record time.”

Frankly, the president is giving the government too much credit. While federal grants and purchase agreements certainly helped accelerate vaccine production — by essentiall­y helping companies scale up manufactur­ing capacity even before they knew whether their vaccine candidates would succeed in clinical trials — the actual research was overwhelmi­ngly performed and funded by the private sector. Pfizer invested $2 billion of its own capital to research and develop its shots; other drug companies have invested billions more. That capital, of course, comes from revenue generated by previous drug sales, or from investors willing to take a risk on a small, revenue-less biotech’s promising but unproven medicine.

It’s tough to chalk the president’s misstateme­nt up to a mere gaffe. His administra­tion is pushing for heavyhande­d price controls, which would sap the private sector’s enthusiasm for investing in biotech. Only ideologues who truly believe that the government — not private companies — drives drug developmen­t would put forth such disastrous proposals.

Price control proponents typically highlight federal research spending, arguing that if the government helps pay for the research, it deserves a role in setting drug prices.

And it’s true that the federal government spends billions — about $43 billion in 2018, to be precise — on research at the National Institute of Health and university labs.

The overwhelmi­ng majority of these federal grants fund basic, yet valuable research.

Companies generally have to spend years and hundreds of millions of dollars turning those insights into tangible, experiment­al drugs — and then hundreds of millions more to conduct clinical trials and navigate the labyrinthi­ne regulatory approval process.

Simply put, private companies take the biggest risks when developing COVID-19 vaccines as well as other drugs. They routinely weather huge losses. For instance, three of the world’s largest vaccine makers — GlaxoSmith­Kline, Sanofi and Merck — saw their vaccine candidates fail. Merck’s unsuccessf­ul efforts incinerate­d at least $300 million. Fortunatel­y, Merck has agreed to use its considerab­le manufactur­ing capacity to produce the successful Johnson & Johnson vaccine. Sanofi and Novartis are likewise helping manufactur­e the Pfizer vaccine.

The federal government just isn’t temperamen­tally equipped to play this role. Politician­s and taxpayers would never tolerate spending billions of dollars on reasearch and developmen­t projects that are mostly doomed to fail.

Of every 5,000 drug molecules examined in the lab, only one ever makes it through animal testing, clinical trials, and the regulatory approval process to win the FDA’s green light. Despite this staggering failure rate, firms collective­ly invested $129 billion in medical and health R&D in the United States in 2018. Investors understand the long odds — but calculate that the potential rewards from developing a blockbuste­r drug justify the risks.

That calculus would surely change if the government arbitraril­y capped prices, as Biden and other members of his party advocate. A slate of proposals — from the across-the-board price controls contained in H.R. 3 to the perennial calls to let Medicare bureaucrat­s set prices — would slash biotech companies’ revenues and limit their potential profits. Investors’ capital would flow out of the medical research sector into other industries that offer less risk and better returns.

Markets work. And incentives matter. Imposing price controls on drugs would deter the massive privatesec­tor research investment­s that delivered multiple lifesaving COVID-19 vaccines — as well as dozens of other new drugs developed here in America each year.

 ?? Getty IMaGes FIle ?? LIFESAVING VACCINES: Vials of undiluted Pfizer COVID19 vaccine are prepared to administer to staff and residents at the Goodwin House Bailey’s Crossroads, a senior living community in Falls Church, Va., in December.
Getty IMaGes FIle LIFESAVING VACCINES: Vials of undiluted Pfizer COVID19 vaccine are prepared to administer to staff and residents at the Goodwin House Bailey’s Crossroads, a senior living community in Falls Church, Va., in December.

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