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hi-v-rocknroll ◴[] No.40173019[source]
Semaglutide retails for $17k USD/year in the US but costs only $60 to make. Perhaps it could be argued that the autoinjectors are "expensive", but not $17k/year and oral forms are coming online to make this item moot. In limited circumstances, excessive profits cross into the realm of price gouging and shouldn't be allowed by regulatory enforcement.
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ProjectArcturis ◴[] No.40173204[source]
Microsoft Office retails for $250 but costs $0 to make. Perhaps it could be argued that installation CDs are "expensive", but not $250, and online downloads make this item moot.
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aaomidi ◴[] No.40173261[source]
Is there a difference between Microsoft Office and medication that can help solve an endemic/pandemic of Obesity I wonder?

There are times where the government, can, and should drop in and buy the entire IP associated with a medication. This price should be set with a council of various representatives, and it should not be something that the drug manufacturing company can reject.

Most of the research here is already partially funded by the tax payer through Government funds of colleges, etc etc anyway.

This isn't even something unheard of. The US has the power to unilaterally cancel patents.

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spywaregorilla ◴[] No.40173440[source]
> There are times where the government, can, and should drop in and buy the entire IP associated with a medication.

For what price?

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1. aaomidi ◴[] No.40173458{3}[source]
> This price should be set with a council of various representatives, and it should not be something that the drug manufacturing company can reject.

This is part of the cost of doing business. If a drug company is going to close shop and want to go operate in Europe or China, that's a risk we should be fine taking.

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2. yorwba ◴[] No.40173525[source]
Semaglutide was developed in Europe...
3. spywaregorilla ◴[] No.40173622[source]
Ok great. So what's the price?

Drug X was funded for development for $XXX million because it was perceived to have a strong positive expected ROI dependent on selling the drug for $Y leading to an expected value of $ZZZ million.

If you're offering $ZZZ million for it then the drug companies won't complain but you're just having the public pay the total cost up front. If you're offering substantially less than $ZZZ million, then the drug company will not invest $XXX million because you've just slashed he potential ROI.

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4. zaroth ◴[] No.40173859[source]
The answer is to publicly fund the R&D and claim only those drugs to be royalty-free.

Private R&D can still fund development and set prices how they want. But they’ll have to compete with publicly funded alternatives.

The shame is that NIH already provides an incredible quantity of funding, but it certainly doesn’t result in the US getting any better drug prices…

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5. spywaregorilla ◴[] No.40174180{3}[source]
So, hypothetically, if the government is funding a research team to cure X; and a private research team discovers it first with no government funding, the US should just accept that and pay full price
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6. zaroth ◴[] No.40175350{4}[source]
That’s not really how patents work, unless this hypothetical is they are testing exactly the same substance?

More likely they are two different treatments that maybe take the same general approach. If the publicly funded one is available at cost, the private one would have to be significantly better to make any money.

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7. spywaregorilla ◴[] No.40175590{5}[source]
No need for it to be the same. The point is that research fails ALL THE TIME. It is trivially easy to believe that the public route, by chance and to no fault of the researcher's competence, does not work whereas the private one did. So what happens then? Because that is basically where we are now, it's just that the government lost money funding one particular idea.

It would be great if the public developed useful, novel drugs. But if you're proposing a system where the private side can still develop them, patent them, and sell them at a high price; then it's not really different from today. You shouldn't assume that both parties would solve problems independently and redundantly. It doesn't even really make sense to pursue alternative development. If there's a cure for X; are you REALLY going to encourage public researchers to find a different cure for the same thing to try and lower the cost of the drug? That sounds like a very ineffective approach.