Posts Tagged: "Martin Shkreli"

A Simple Way to Lower Drug Prices

Consumers suffer the scourge of high drug prices. Brand-name drug companies reap monopoly profits. But generic drugs, which promise lower prices, are often nowhere to be found. One reason is that brand firms have engaged in an array of conduct to block generics. In short: A sample is crucial. Without it, there is no generic.

Will More Regulation Create Cheaper Drugs?

The idea of reducing drug prices through more government control is always simmering on the backburner and doesn’t require much to bring it to a full boil. Two recent actions turned up the heat to full blast. The response is often calls for more regulation, but ever increasing regulation benefits established players, which while inconvenienced, can afford to play the game. Start-ups can’t survive in endless oceans of red-tape that increase their costs while restricting market entry. Before rushing to impose more federal control, it might be wise to ask if government regulations inadvertently contribute to the problem.

Pharmaceutical greed makes Martin Shkreli public enemy #1

On August 10th, the rights to sell Daraprim were bought from Impax Laboratories Inc. (NASDAQ:IPXL) of Hayward, CA, by Turing Pharmaceuticals, a privately held company with headquarters in New York City and Switzerland. Shortly after acquiring Daraprim, Turing CEO Martin Shkreli raised its price by more than 5,000 percent, from $13.50 per pill up to $750 per pill for a medication that’s not usually prescribed by itself; it’s typically part of a larger regimen for AIDS and cancer patients. As the result of public outcry, Shkreli announced several days ago that the price would drop from $750 a pill to some unspecified level. He pointed out that at $13.50 a pill the drug was not profitable to sell. Still, the damage has been done to an industry everyone loves to hate because drug prices in the U.S. are perceived to be outrageously high already.