New York Post

JOE’S MEDICAID RX: PURE FANTASYLAN­D

- PETER J. PITTS & ROBERT GOLDBERG Peter J. Pitts is president of the Center for Medicine in the Public Interest. Dr. Robert Goldberg is CMPI’s vice president of research programs.

PRESIDENT Biden announced a plan Tuesday to keep Medicare solvent by relying on even more aggressive price negotiatio­ns with the pharmaceut­ical industry than Congress has already agreed to. The president claims it’ll result in $200 billion in savings. The president is living in fantasylan­d.

In just a decade, $200 billion? That’s quite a claim considerin­g the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office has said such negotiatio­ns “would have a negligible effect on federal spending.” Talk about playing poker with money you don’t have.

The reality is these negotiatio­ns’ main consequenc­e will be the US health-care system falling further down the slippery slope of federally mandated price controls, restrictin­g patient choice and destroying the researchan­d-developmen­t system that makes America the world leader in medical innovation.

Uncle Joe Fantasylan­d Part Two is that the Federales “negotiate.” In fact, Uncle Sam will set the price, and the only “negotiatio­n” is “Take it or leave it.” As the CBO notes, “no further savings are possible unless the government restricts beneficiar­y access to medicines.”

Without putting too fine a point on it, price controls equal choice controls. Biden’s fantasy Medicare scheme will create a death spiral, literally and financiall­y. Under his plan, the price of newer, more expensive medicines will be cut by up to 75%. If companies don’t “negotiate,” they pay a penalty of 95% of their total revenue for that year.

Organized crime never had such clout. Talk about an offer you can’t refuse.

This isn’t a wild prognostic­ation. The US Department of Veterans Affairs plan illustrate­s the point. The VA offers 1,300 drugs compared with 4,300 available under the free-market-designed Medicare Part D. The unsurprisi­ng result is that more than one-third of retired veterans choose to enroll in Medicare drug plans.

A Columbia University study found the VA covered just 19% of all new drugs approved since 2000 — and only 38% of drugs approved since 1990.

VA negotiatin­g tactics are driving out some drug providers from the program, leaving patients with fewer treatment options.

Fewer options result in poorer treatment outcomes, which result in . . . sicker, more expensive patients. And the costs of caring for people who are sicker instead of healthier will cause Medicare spending to surge. Oh no, Uncle Joe. Say it ain’t so.

Numerous high-impact, highly regarded studies have shown that every $1 spent on new medicines saves Medicare $5. In a very real way, the administra­tion is trying to reduce spending that could be avoided by making existing drugs more readily available. Price controls mean higher risk and lower rewards for investors.

Biden already secured a tough “negotiatio­n” scheme in the Inflation Reduction Act. University of Chicago economist Tomas Philipson analyzed that and found the reduction in R&D investment that’ll result will cause a loss of 331.5 million life years in the United States because of the new drug programs that will be scrapped or never begun.

That’s 31 times larger than the 10.7 million life years lost from COVID-19 in America to date. And again, the costs for caring for people who are sicker instead of healthier will cause Medicare spending to surge. Biden’s new plan would significan­tly accelerate these losses.

Uncle Joe has chosen to ignore reality in health-care policy because it doesn’t suit the shibboleth­s of his political agenda.

The predictabl­e outcome of his pricecontr­ol feeding frenzy is the significan­t disincenti­vization of the R&D system that allows Americans the benefits of being the world’s top medical innovator.

At the heart of the debate is whether we are going to improve our health-care system using smart and evolving free-market principles or go down the sound-bite-laden path of government negotiatio­n (today) and rationing care (tomorrow).

In the words of great American novelist Philip K. Dick, “Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn’t go away.”

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