News Briefs: US Drug Price Growth Offsets Falling Prices Elsewhere

  • Jan 27, 2022

    The price of the average brand-name drug has increased by 18.3% annually on average over the last five years, according to research firm GlobalData. Floriane Reinaud, research and analysis director at GlobalData, said in a statement that this price growth is unique to the U.S. “While drug list prices have only been increasing in the US, major markets in the rest of the world are seeing declines. Japan, for example, saw drug prices decline by more than 9% while Germany declined by around 7.5%,” Reinaud said.

    The business strength of “speculative grade” pharmaceutical companies varies considerably, mainly due to differences in their produce concentration and drug development pipelines, according to S&P Global Data. S&P analysts Patrick Bell and David A. Kaplan also wrote that “although speculative-grade companies are frequently more aggressive in pricing and life cycle management strategies, legislators and the media primarily focus criticism on well-known investment-grade peers and their more widely prescribed blockbuster drugs. Similarly, we believe pharmacy benefit managers place more attention on controlling spending on blockbuster drugs than those with narrower patient bases such as orphan drugs. Nevertheless, with a higher proportion of revenues generated in the U.S. and higher leverage, we believe drug price reform could hurt speculative-grade pharma companies disproportionately.”

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  • AIS Health Staff

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