As was true with the industry generally, lobby spending was way up, over prior periods, in early 2018 -- at all three companies. Amgen came in at $4.46 million -- but Pfizer was well beyond both of them, at over half what the whole trade group spent in Q1. For its part, here is a bit of what Pfizer lobbied about:
. . . .Drug Pricing, Biosimilars Reimbursement, Antibiotic Resistance/ Incentives, Drug Shortages, Reimbursement for products treating Sickle Cell Disease. . . .
Trans Pacific Partnership Negotiations, Miscellaneous Tariff Bill, Trans-Atlantic trade & Investment Partnership, Canada, IP/Trade Issues, South Africa IP Issues, China IP, Indonesia IP, Thailand IP, Korea Pricing Issues, United Nations Health Panel, G7/G20, APEC, OECD, Australia Market -- Size Damages, WTO "Zero for Zero" Pharmaceutical Agreement, NAFTA. . . .
Medicare Part D, Coverage Gap, Biosimilar pass-through. . . .
Comprehensive Corporate Tax Reform. . . .
Now you know -- I think it likely that there is some fear of a Trump administration move to directly regulate drug prices (a la Nixon's wage/price freezes), driving this upsurge in spending. Indeed, on to the north woods, for a few hours' drive, and a sweet Sunday brunch with my youngest.
नमस्ते
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