BusinessPostCorner.com
No Result
View All Result
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
  • Home
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Accounting
  • Tax
  • Management
  • Marketing
  • Crypto News
  • Human Resources
BusinessPostCorner.com
  • Home
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Accounting
  • Tax
  • Management
  • Marketing
  • Crypto News
  • Human Resources
No Result
View All Result
BusinessPostCorner.com
No Result
View All Result

Trump promised lower drug prices. Here’s how Congress virtually guaranteed the opposite

March 4, 2026
in Business
Reading Time: 3 mins read
A A
0
Trump promised lower drug prices. Here’s how Congress virtually guaranteed the opposite
ShareShareShareShareShare

President Trump has repeatedly promised to bring down prescription drug prices. His Republican Congress says it shares that goal. But tucked inside the recently passed 2026 Consolidated Appropriations Act is a restructuring of the drug market that makes lower prices less likely, not more.

How does a Congress that promises lower prices end up weakening the bargaining tools that restrain them? The answer lies less in ideology than in political incentives. Pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) are opaque intermediaries—and they are unpopular with figures including Mark Cuban, who told Fortune that the current rebate system is flawed.

The law transforms PBMs from hard-bargaining negotiators into micromanaged administrators and weaken the tools they use to discipline drug prices. Targeting PBMs is easier than confronting the suppliers who ultimately set prices. But in markets where prices are negotiated, weakening the intermediary often strengthens the firms on the other side of the table. Here’s how we got here.

Decades of growing leverage

For decades, PBMs have relied on two key mechanisms to reduce drug costs. It’s no accident that drug manufacturers—and independent pharmacies—have spent years trying to shift political attention towards PBMs. Hard bargaining works.

The first mechanism that PBMs use is formulary leverage. Drug manufacturers that want preferred formulary placement—or to avoid exclusion from coverage—must offer better prices. That leverage for PBMs depends on a credible threat: lower your price or lose access to patients.

The law “delinks” PBM compensation from manufacturer rebates in Medicare and requires flat administrative fees, certified at fair market value. It also mandates that rebates be passed through to health plan sponsors in the employer-sponsored market. This sounds appealing, but incentives matter. When compensation no longer depends on securing better terms, bargaining effort becomes a cost center rather than a profit center. PBMs will still compete for contracts, but competition on administrative fees isn’t the same as competition on aggressive price concessions and won’t lower drug prices.

The second tool for PBMs operates downstream. By encouraging patients to use more efficient, lower-cost pharmacies, PBMs have reduced dispensing costs, enhanced patient quality, and reinforced their negotiating leverage upstream. The ability to direct volume toward lower-cost, high-value providers creates bargaining power.

The statute expands “any willing pharmacy” requirements, limiting that ability. In virtually every sector, purchasers obtain lower prices by steering volume toward lower-cost providers. When every provider must be included on standardized terms, bargaining power diminishes and costs tend to rise. Broader inclusion may feel consumer-friendly, but in negotiated markets it often shifts costs rather than reduces them.

To be sure, neither tool is costless. Formulary exclusions can inconvenience some patients, and encouraging patients to use lower-cost pharmacies can mean switching where they fill their prescriptions. But every healthcare system faces a choice: tolerate some limits or accept higher prices across the board. Negotiation requires leverage, and leverage requires the ability to say no—and to reward lower-cost drugs and providers with more business.

The irony is that Congress is weakening cost-control tools in the name of combating high drug costs.

Seniors on Medicare will pay the price

For decades, reformers have tried to move American health care away from cost-plus reimbursement and open-ended fee-for-service medicine toward competition, in which private plans negotiate hard and shift business to those offering better value. The new PBM regime would move in the opposite direction: toward regulatory supervision, standardized participation, and reduced discretion.

All participants in the prescription drug supply chain deserve scrutiny, but weakening the mechanisms that extract price concessions will not lower drug spending. The more likely outcomes are gains for drug companies and less efficient pharmacies, and higher drug costs. Effects will be especially felt by seniors on Medicare and by smaller employers that lack the leverage to offset the law’s new constraints.

If lawmakers want lower drug prices, they should strengthen competitive pressure, not regulate it into passivity. The politics are easy to understand. Attacking middlemen polls well. It allows lawmakers to appear tough on prices without directly confronting manufacturers. But the economics are less forgiving. Lower drug prices require bargaining power. Congress has just reduced it. Patients and taxpayers will bear the cost.

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.

Credit: Source link

ShareTweetSendPinShare
Previous Post

Adidas taps billionaire Nassef Sawiris for chair

Next Post

Legal AI is splitting in two—and most people miss the difference

Next Post
Legal AI is splitting in two—and most people miss the difference

Legal AI is splitting in two—and most people miss the difference

Ethereum Price Prediction: Golden Triangle Since 2017 To Send ETH Parabolic

Ethereum Price Prediction: Golden Triangle Since 2017 To Send ETH Parabolic

April 13, 2026
Ethereum Price Prediction: ETH Foundation Selling More For Funding

Ethereum Price Prediction: ETH Foundation Selling More For Funding

April 9, 2026
Inflation jump nearly 1% in a month—and it’s hitting you at the grocery store and gas station

Inflation jump nearly 1% in a month—and it’s hitting you at the grocery store and gas station

April 10, 2026
Santa Claus impersonators get a tax break on tips, but not accountants or tax pros

Santa Claus impersonators get a tax break on tips, but not accountants or tax pros

April 13, 2026
Why time is on Iran’s side

Why time is on Iran’s side

April 13, 2026
Warren Buffett’s first tax return showed  owed to the IRS

Warren Buffett’s first tax return showed $7 owed to the IRS

April 14, 2026
BusinessPostCorner.com

BusinessPostCorner.com is an online news portal that aims to share the latest news about following topics: Accounting, Tax, Business, Finance, Crypto, Management, Human resources and Marketing. Feel free to get in touch with us!

Recent News

Help to Buy mostly helped high earners, IFS says

Help to Buy mostly helped high earners, IFS says

April 14, 2026
Trump’s White House: America is short 10 million houses

Trump’s White House: America is short 10 million houses

April 14, 2026

Our Newsletter!

Loading
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA

© 2023 businesspostcorner.com - All Rights Reserved!

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Accounting
  • Tax
  • Management
  • Marketing
  • Crypto News
  • Human Resources

© 2023 businesspostcorner.com - All Rights Reserved!