Lodi News-Sentinel

Becerra is the right choice at the right time

- DAVID BALTO David Balto is a former policy director of the Federal Trade Commission and a public interest antitrust attorney. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

At the moment, there is partisan controvers­y about the appointmen­t of Xavier Becerra, the current attorney general of California, to be the next U.S. secretary of Health and Human Services. Some of it is the expected political sparring, but some critics decry his nomination of a lack of direct “policy experience” because he has not worked in the health care industry. Those critics are wrong.

One of the most significan­t reasons for skyrocketi­ng health care costs and considerab­ly less choice is the lack of competitio­n. In market after market, health care and pharmaceut­ical delivery options are dominated by a small number of firms using their control to squelch competitio­n and increase prices.

Becerra, through his leadership of the largest state attorney general's office, is a national leader in challengin­g these practices, bringing precedents­etting cases against dominant hospital systems and pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers that engaged in exclusiona­ry conduct. These cases secured California consumers hundreds of millions in settlement­s and are a model of using the law to restore competitio­n.

In his role as California’s attorney general, Becerra learned — firsthand — how regulation­s could be abused by dominant firms, including Pharmacy Benefit Managers — to ramp up prices and limit competitio­n. He sought regulatory changes to address these abusive practices and led a group of state attorneys general who successful­ly advocated to the Supreme Court to permit sensible regulation of PBMs. This type of regulatory/competitio­n savvy is precisely what the nation needs to lead our health care system and much-needed regulatory reform.

One area where antitrust enforcemen­t and regulatory reform is long overdue is the so-called pharmaceut­ical “rebate traps.” These are clever schemes by a small number of dominant drug manufactur­ers to keep rival drugs off the market by offering PBMs and health insurers “all or nothing” conditiona­l sales volume-based rebates only if those payors place rival drugs in a poor position on the formulary, effectivel­y sticking it on the back of the pharmacy shelf. This practice limits the ability of rival drugs from gaining preferred formulary access and sometimes denies them from getting on formulary at all. If consumers want the drug, they have to pay a steep price.

This also means that payors often make decisions on inclusion of a drug based not on clinical research or evidence efficacy, but on which manufactur­er offers a higher rebate payment based on higher list prices. Ultimately, consumers pay more and are denied more effective drugs.

These schemes have been condemned by policymake­rs and regulators on both sides of the aisle. Alex Azar, former secretary of HHS; Scott Gottlieb, a former commission­er of the FDA; Sen. Amy Klobuchar and Sen. Richard Blumenthal; and Rep. David Cicilline and Rep. Hakeem Jeffries have all raised substantia­l concerns over the use of anticompet­itive pharmaceut­ical rebate walls. Nine current and former senators, including Kamala Harris, raised concerns over these practices in the FTC review of the Abbvie/Allergan merger. And, major consumer groups called on the Biden Transition Team to focus antitrust enforcemen­t efforts on this practice.

Becerra has firsthand experience in dealing with Big Pharma and that experience will give him a unique perspectiv­e on how to use enforcemen­t and regulation to restore competitio­n. As California’s attorney general, Becerra investigat­ed and brought enforcemen­t actions against drug manufactur­ers’ anticompet­itive business practices. He successful­ly negotiated huge settlement­s with drug manufactur­ers and advocated for California’s legislatio­n to ban pay-for-delay agreements.

His office also played a major role investigat­ing these issues, including rebate walls in the context of the Abbvie/Allergan merger. And, just last week in a written response to the Senate Judiciary Committee after his nomination hearing, Becerra said that “biosimilar­s have a role to play in containing the cost of expensive therapies by creating competitio­n. I am committed to reducing drug prices and ensuring Americans have access to the drugs that they need.”

This is precisely why HHS needs Becerra’s expertise and experience. He will bring enforcemen­t and regulatory savvy to the job, with a keen understand­ing of how to use both antitrust litigation and regulation to help restore competitio­n and to ensure consumers receive a competitiv­e price and have adequate choices. As secretary of HHS, he can use the administra­tion’s broad regulatory tools and enforcemen­t to restore competitio­n in pharmaceut­ical and health care markets. This is not the time for the nation to turn to a former hospital or pharma executive to head HHS. We need a cop on the beat, one who knows how to protect consumers through sound law enforcemen­t. Becerra is the right choice for the job.

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