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Steve Shannon's avatar

My take away from this piece is that US consumer pays a lot for medicine because companies can and do charge it, and then thanks to the Citizens United decision, spend part of the proceeds making sure elected representatives represent them and not the US consumer. Some bold politicians will have die on the hill of change for anything to happen.

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Neural Foundry's avatar

Brilliant breakdown on pharma's shift to financialization over innovation. The part about companies spending more on buybacks than R&D (577 vs 521 billion) really undercuts that whole "high prices fund research" argument. I've seen firsthand how pharma reps frame this as inevitable market dynamics when its really just rent-seeking behaviour protected by lobbying. Seems like the Swiss model could work here if we got past the ideological hangup that any government pricenegotiation is "socialism."

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