Should the government negotiate prescription drug prices?
Affordable medicine or lost innovation?
The U.S. government is actively negotiating prescription drug prices for Medicare through the Inflation Reduction Act, signed in 2022, with three rounds of negotiations now underway or complete. Separately, the Trump administration issued a 'Most-Favored-Nation' executive order on May 12, 2025, securing agreements with nine major pharmaceutical manufacturers to align U.S. drug prices with the lowest prices paid by other developed nations. The debate has shifted from whether the government should negotiate drug prices to how it should do so.
When the government negotiates drug prices, does it save patients money or kill the next miracle drug before it's invented? The answer depends entirely on whether you think profit is the engine of medical progress or just the price we pay for it.
- CMS Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program announcements (Rounds 1, 2, and 3)
- Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 (P.L. 117-169)
- Trump Administration Executive Order, 'Delivering Most-Favored-Nation Prescription Drug Pricing to American Patients,' May 12, 2025
- U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit ruling on Janssen/BMS v. HHS, September 2025
- CMS projected savings estimates for IRA Round 1 negotiations
- RAND Corporation and CMS data on U.S. vs. OECD drug price comparisons
- Lobbying disclosure data on Medicare price negotiation legislation
- Medicare Part D enrollment and spending data (2023)