[Congressional Record Volume 148, Number 100 (Monday, July 22, 2002)]
[House]
[Page H5068]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE HIGH COST OF PRESCRIPTION DRUGS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentleman from Minnesota (Mr. Gutknecht) is recognized for 5 minutes.
Mr. GUTKNECHT. Mr. Speaker, I rise once again to talk about the high
cost of prescription drugs, more importantly, the price that Americans
pay versus what people in most of the rest of the industrialized world
pay for exactly the same drugs.
This particular chart is one that I have used many times here on the
House floor and at town hall meetings back in my district. They are
beginning to get dated and a little bit frayed, but I want to talk
about some of the prices that Americans pay, and what we have listed
here is roughly about a dozen of the most commonly prescribed drugs.
One that we have learned an awful lot about last fall when we had the
anthrax scare here in Washington, and unfortunately four of our postal
workers lost their lives to anthrax, we learned a lot about Cipro.
Cipro is a drug made by a German drug manufacturer called Bayer. We in
the United States know it as a company that became famous making
aspirin, Bayer Aspirin; but it is a German company, and they make a lot
of other pharmaceuticals. But I wanted to point out to my colleagues
what we pay for a 30-day supply on average for Cipro is about $88. It
is $87.99 to be exact. That same drug in Europe sells for an average of
about $40.75, less than half the price for exactly the same drug.
I will say that Tommy Thompson, our Secretary of Health and Human
Services, did a good job; he negotiated a very good price on the
millions of capsules that we bought at the time that we were concerned
about anthrax, and we still are concerned about anthrax, and he got a
much better price than that, but this is what the average consumer
would pay. A drug like Claritin, which is a very commonly prescribed
drug this time of year for allergies that people have, in the United
States the average price is $89. That same drug on average sells in
Europe for $18.75. A drug that my father uses, my 84-year-old, soon to
be 85-year-old, father takes a drug called Coumadin. Many seniors take
Coumadin. It is a blood thinner and one of the most commonly prescribed
drugs. A 30-day supply if you have to go down to your local pharmacy
and pay for it yourself sells for about $64.88. That exact same drug
made in the same plant under the same FDA approval sells in Europe for
about $15.80. And so the list goes.
I am not here tonight to beat up on the pharmaceutical industry. It
is really not so much shame on them, because they are only doing what
any free market company would do and, that is, to exploit a market
opportunity that they have.
{time} 2115
So it is not shame on them. They have done a great job of developing
many drugs that not only save lives but improve the quality of lives
not only for Americans but for people around the world. The problem is
that the way we have set this system up, because we do not require
competition, we have created a monster and the monster is that we are
paying literally all of the costs for the research for the rest of the
world.
More importantly, there are estimates that at least 60 percent of the
drug companies' profits come at the expense of American consumers.
I happen to believe that Americans ought to pay their fair share for
prescription drugs. We are a very wealthy country. God has blessed this
country. We are the most productive country in the world, and therefore
we probably should pay more than the developing countries in Europe,
but I do not think that American consumers should have to subsidize the
starving Swiss. Let me say too, Mr. Speaker, these are not my prices. I
did not make up this chart. These are from a group called the Life
Extension Foundation which for more than a decade has been studying the
differences between what Americans pay for prescription drugs and what
the rest of the world pays. I also want to point out a chart, because
what we are seeing is an incredible inflation rate in the cost of
prescription drugs, and what you see here from the latest estimates we
have for 2001, prescription drugs went up in the United States about 19
percent. The average Social Security cost-of-living adjustment was a
little less than 3\1/2\ percent. One does not have to have a degree in
statistics to realize that this is unsustainable. We cannot live with
this system. So some of us have come together and tried to put together
a program that we think will work, and what we are going to be
introducing is a bill here in the next several days that will make it
very clear that Americans do have access to these drugs at world market
prices and it is a simple bill that simply says if it is an FDA-
approved drug made in an FDA-approved facility that both consumers and
their pharmacists can import those drugs or reimport those drugs into
American markets.
And how much can we save? Let me give you an idea. We estimate that
you can save at least 35 percent on the drugs coming in, the same drugs
made in the same FDA-approved facilities as opposed to what you will
pay for them here in the United States. And to put a pencil to that,
our own accounting experts, the people at the Congressional Budget
Office, estimate that seniors alone over the next 10 years will spend
over $2 trillion on prescription drugs. Two trillion dollars times 35
percent is $700 billion that we can save.
I hope my colleagues will join me in supporting this very important
legislation which will give Americans access to world market drugs at
world market prices.
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