- Capitalists Giving Capitalism a Bad Name The American Spectator's conservative Doug Bandow, hardly a champion of the Democratic health care bill, says drug makers are giving the free market a bad name. "It is yet another example of how the greatest enemies of capitalism tend to be the capitalists," he writes.
- Unintended Consequences of Dealing With Big Pharma A week ago, The New Republic's Jonathan Cohn predicted price increases after studying a report that predicted that the structuring of the health care bill would create more demand for pharmaceuticals. "You have more demand for name-brand drugs. As a result, IMS believes,
pharmaceutical companies would be able to raise their prices — enough
to boost revenue significantly: 'If this bill is implemented,' the
report concludes on page 138, 'an increase in prices on new drugs can
be expected.'"
- Proof That Big Pharma Owns the Government Choire Sicha of The Awl blog is infuriated.
Our elected officials—at best—regurgitate drug lobby talking points on healthcare...Is it a legal problem to say that it is my opinion, though I would do no such thing myself, of course, that the only political answer is that they should all be taken out back and shot? And then dismembered, and the remaining pieces of them shot individually, while every available orifice is filled with Raptiva and Xenical?'
- Business Is Good John Cole of Balloon Juice greets the news with snark. "The Prescription Drug Plan really was fiscal conservatism at its best," he writes.
- Just Like Wall Street The Prairie Weather blog says the drug industry is as audacious as the Wall Street bankers who played nice with the government when they were worried about regulation and then pushed the cost of their deal onto taxpayers. "Just as the banks are doing with credit, the pharmaceutical industry is hastily raising its prices before the new health reform package kicks in."
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