wtf maaaan?http://money.cnn.com/2006/10/31/news/companies/generics/index.htm?cnn=yes
10/31/2006 1:57:03 PM
did you not know this? keeps other countries from cashing in on R&D done elsewhere
10/31/2006 2:07:16 PM
CALL IT IGNORANCE!
10/31/2006 2:14:46 PM
10/31/2006 2:36:05 PM
Ain't no such thing as a worldwide patent.There are a FEW countries with patent sharing, AKA the US and the UK, but you basically have to apply for a patent in every damn country in the world to ensure protection. There have been several attempts in the last couple of decades to come up with a unified global patent system, but they have pretty much all failed miserably once they got out of the idea phase.
10/31/2006 2:43:08 PM
We need this for drug companies. And then we need to stop paying 99% of the costs of R&D in drugs ourselves while they're next to free in other countries.A world price for drugs would be fantastic. Reimporting them from Canada would get the process started by making it more expensive in Canada and a hair cheaper here.
10/31/2006 2:45:10 PM
^^^ haha exactly what I thought of[Edited on October 31, 2006 at 3:22 PM. Reason : ]
10/31/2006 3:22:01 PM
^^Uh it wouldnt make drug prices any cheaper, it would just make them as expensive everywhere.Do you even know WHY drugs cost what they do?
10/31/2006 3:27:57 PM
The non-bs answer is because they can charge that much.
10/31/2006 4:57:19 PM
10/31/2006 5:13:36 PM
Dude this is a capitalist market.If you institute worldwide patents, they aren't going to lower prices, they are just going to MASSIVELY up their bottom lines, and increase research that much more.That's the entire point of the pharma industry, is exclusive rights, inflated prices for a small time to recoup R&D, and then the drug becomes public domain and everyone can "afford it".Reimporting would destroy the US industry with a quickness, and would spell the end of new drug development, at least in this country.------------------You are confusing two issues. 1) is worldwide patents, which is what im talking about2) is this world drug price fixing, which is fucking retarded.This is a FREE MARKET ECONOMY. YOU CANT FUCKING FIX PRICES because they are "TOO HIGH" for you. You want to talk like it's simple economics, the ramifications of doing something like that are ridiculous. Everytime the government has tried doing something like this, it's been a giant fuck up. Sure works for regulating trains and airlines after all. [Edited on October 31, 2006 at 5:20 PM. Reason : .]
10/31/2006 5:17:15 PM
Reimporting would destroy the US industry?You know we're talking about reimporting US drugs, right?I mean, if I sold candy bars to Canada and then brought them back into the US, would that ruin the candy bar business?The deal with pharma is that Americans pay the price that is high enough to recoup R&D while the world gets a price closer to a normal rate of return on non R&D investment. If, instead, the whole world paid one price it would be high enough to recoup R&D with a normal return on investment and the price would still be lower than it is in the US now. That's because you'd have MANY MANY MANY more people paying at the same price rather than one group paying at marginal cost and one group paying high enough to recoup R&D and a normal rate of return on top.This is really quite simple. We should drag this into the SoapBox where Loneshark and Kris, who also know economics, will tell you this.__I'm not confusing the two. I responded to
10/31/2006 5:22:18 PM
hahahahahahahahahahahahahanot even going to waste my time
10/31/2006 6:41:17 PM
if we import drugs from canada all we are doing is having the G&S tax that canadians pay subsidize our drugswe dont really win
10/31/2006 8:29:52 PM
The government does not regulate the price explicitly. Like Bgm said, the Pharma's are allowed to function as a monopoly. The exclusive right to function as a monopoly is the "reward" for millions spent on R&D and the creation of a successful drug. Just like each additional copy of Window's costs Microsoft pennies, each additional pill that a Pharma sells costs a fraction of the retail price. The high price comes from the need to recover R&D costs and make a normal profit. Other countries ignore the US patent and basically steal the R&D from US Pharma's. Consequently, the US finances all R&D for the rest of the world.Actually, on second thought, this is very comparable to the software industry and utilities where you find natural monopolies - high fixed (initial/R&D)costs with decreasing marginal production costs.[Edited on October 31, 2006 at 8:37 PM. Reason : ][Edited on October 31, 2006 at 8:39 PM. Reason : ][Edited on October 31, 2006 at 8:40 PM. Reason : ]
10/31/2006 8:37:27 PM
10/31/2006 8:44:49 PM
^ You're right about that. I get tired of people vilifying Pharma's when, in fact, they generate the same profits as nearly every other company and industry. Same goes for Exxon and Hal.
10/31/2006 8:48:29 PM
I don't blame pharma for it, but if we reimported drugs, they'd be forced to set a world price (or approximately a world price) instead. Humanitarian aid can still subsidize the poorest countries, but we wouldn't get stuck with the whole bill. It would lower our prices some and raise theirs some.
10/31/2006 8:59:08 PM
1) It's not a monopoly when there are multiple independent players. They have patent protection over individual drugs, but that's not a monopoly either.2) The reason meds are so much cheaper in several other countries has as much to do with their subsidized healthcare systems as it does the pharma companies setting lower sale prices3) The pharma industry is NOTHING like software. In fact they are semantically and logically completely opposite models. 4) Economically, the pharma companies would, if anything, just set the same rate abroad that they have here for their superstar medications. What possible motivation do they have to LOWER prices anywhere? They won't sell any more with a lower pricepoint, as they have an HMO backed single unit monopoly here, and abroad raising the price to match that would make sense.It doesn't make ANY sense to lower the price of drugs here, regardless of what is done abroad. Not only that, but this is not as simple as pure economics. You have a lot of legal issues, patent issues, IP rights issues, manufacturing and certification issues among others.There are a LOT of reasons why the system works the way it does. Again, this is a capitalist country
11/1/2006 2:23:38 AM
I read some metric somewhere that the majority of new drug development was funded by research grants paid for with tax money anyway, and that big pharma just gorges themselves from this research.
11/1/2006 3:08:53 AM
It's early so I'll start with point 1.1. Right, the actual firms are not monopolies. They are given monopoly rights to drugs that they develop. Having exclusive rights to produce pill XYZ for 10 years constitutes monopoly power for that drug. There are several empiracal factors that constitute a monopoly - one of those is being able to set a price point well the marginal cost of production.3. It is very similar to the software industry in regards to decreasing marginal prices of production. Both software and pharma have huge intial costs and then substantially decreasing margnial costs of production. 4. One example: Mexico. Does Mexico have a robust state funded medical program? No. Why are drugs cheap in Mexico?
11/1/2006 6:40:29 AM
11/1/2006 7:12:25 AM
Lots of speculation going around ... probably should read a bit to get all of the facts straight:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patentshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drug_companieshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_patent_lawWhat I'd like to see is a historical analysis of what has happened in the past. My guess (and I could be completely wrong about this) is that this has happened before, the company survived, and life moves on. Why is this being presented as something "new"?
11/1/2006 8:02:02 AM
11/1/2006 10:58:56 AM