Because it:
A. Has killed their own R&D, and
B. Throws the whole R&D costs onto the US consumer. And,
C. If the US adopts the same system, drug R&D world-wide will essentially die.
A. A small problem because they had a small amount of R and D relative to the rest of the world.
B. Why is this a concern of Canada?
C. Why is this a concern of Canada?
I am not arguing that the US should necessarily do the same thing, but that the Canadians clearly do benefit from this policy.
Given what you wrote above, I don’t think there’s anyone here qualified to give me one.
You don’t understand that those “sunk costs” must be recouped?
Not on every drug and not in every situation. The sunk costs are not relevant to the Canadian government when they buy drugs. If Pfizer and Merck both spend $100 million developing a similar drug, competition may for the price lower which means that they will not be able to recover all of their sunk costs, but even if they recover some of the sunk costs, that is better than setting the price at such a level to recover all the sunk costs and then not selling anything.
If they are not recouped, how will the drug company be able to continue it’s R&D?
If they don’t make the required return on their investment, they will stop doing R and D, this is true. But of course, Canada has been paying lower drug prices for years and this hasn’t happened yet. So, if you were the Prime Minister of Canada, why would you want to stop using your bargaining power to get lower prices?
Canada didn’t “negotiate” anything – they set the cost by fiat, and then confiscate the patents if the drug companies don’t agree.
No, because the seller is under coersion – if he doesn’t agree, he loses his patent in Canada.
But the drug companies are clearly better off selling to Canada than not selling, since Canada doesn’t send its army down here to force the companies to ship their products to Canada, so the drug companies are clearly better off.
Now you’re beginning to understand. And from Canada’s point of view, they get both cheap drugs and new drugs – by throwing the whole R&D cost onto the American consumer.
If we followed Canada’s lead, we’d kill R&D. Don’t you hope that when the doctor tells you that you have a fatal condition, he will also be able to say, “But we have a drug to treat that nowadays?”
If Canada can get away with it, why shouldn’t they?
I never said we should do the same thing, but what incentive does Canada have to change their behavior?