POLITICS

White House: Drug deals will save taxpayers billions; 144,000 Washington seniors may benefit

Aug 15, 2024, 4:31 PM

Image: Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris, left, and President Joe Biden ...

Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris, left, and President Joe Biden depart after speaking about the administration's efforts to lower prescription drug costs during an event at Prince George's Community College in Largo, Maryland, on Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. (Photo: Susan Walsh, AP)

(Photo: Susan Walsh, AP)

Taxpayers are expected to save billions after the Biden administration inked drug deals with pharmaceutical companies to knock down the lists prices for 10 of Medicare’s .

But how much older Americans can expect to save when they fill a prescription at their local pharmacy remains unclear, since the list cost isn’t the final price people pay.

After months of negotiations with manufacturers, list prices will be reduced by hundreds — in some cases, thousands — of dollars for 30-day supplies of popular drugs used by millions of people on Medicare, including blood thinners, diabetes drugs and blood cancer medications. The reductions, which range between 38% and 79%, take effect in 2026.

“I’ve been waiting for this moment for a long long time,” President Joe Biden said Thursday, during his first policy-oriented appearance with Vice President Kamala Harris since leaving the presidential race. “We pay more for prescription drugs, it’s not hyperbole, than any advanced nation in the world.”

Taxpayers spend more than $50 billion yearly on the 10 drugs, which include popular blood thinners Xarelto and Eliquis and diabetes drugs Jardiance and Januvia.

Presidential politics: Harris is zeroing in on high food prices as inflation remains a big issue in the 2024 race

Reactions from Washington’s 2 U.S. senators

Washington Democratic U.S. Sen. Maria Cantwell celebrated the Biden Administration’s announcement of lower prices in a statement sent to the press Thursday.

“Prescription drug costs continue to be one of the biggest expenses for American families. This historic law allowed the federal government and Medicare to go toe-to-toe with Big Pharma to negotiate the prices of prescription drugs for the first time,” said Sen. Cantwell said. “As a result, 10 common prescriptions that more than 144,000 Washington seniors rely on will be significantly more affordable, meaning $1.5 billion in savings for Americans on out-of-pocket costs, in addition to savings from other IRA prescription drug provisions, while saving taxpayers billions more.”

Cantwell’s statement cited data released by the Department of Health and Human Services which showed in 2022 more than 144,000 Medicare enrollees in the state of Washington needed the 10 drugs announced for price negotiation. Together, those Washingtonians spent about $67.6million out of pocket to access those important medications that year.

Washington Democratic U.S. Sen. Patty Murray also released a statement Thursday. Her message was different than Cantwell, but her approval of the administration’s announcement was the same.

“These lower drug prices negotiated by the Biden-Harris administration, using the authority Democrats empowered them with, will make a world of difference for countless patients when they go into effect in 2026,” Murray noted in her statement. “We are talking price cuts of hundreds and thousands of dollars a month which will help millions of patients across the country, and the law requires more drugs to be added to the negotiating table each year.”

Murray explained in her release that, through negotiations, Medicare reached new agreements with the manufacturers of all 10 drugs — and for 9 out of 10, the new price represents a cut of 50% or more.

She added that when the new, lower prices go into effect in 2026 people on Medicare will save $1.5 billion in out-of-pocket costs for their prescription drugs and Medicare will save $6 billion in the first year alone.

Policy talk: Why Trump’s and Harris’ proposals to end federal taxes on tips would be difficult to enact

Many details about who benefits still need to be provided

With the new prices, the administration says savings are expected to total $6 billion for taxpayers and $1.5 billion overall for some of the 67 million people who rely on Medicare. Details on those calculations, however, have not been released. And the White House said it could not provide an average cost-savings for individual Medicare enrollees who use the drugs.

That’s because there are a number of factors — from discounts to the coinsurance or copays for the person’s Medicare drug plan — that determine the final price a person pays when they pick up their drugs at a pharmacy.

The new drug prices are likely to most benefit people who use one of the negotiated drugs and are enrolled in a Medicare plan with coinsurance that leaves enrollees to pay a percentage of a drug’s cost after they’ve met the deductible, said Tricia Neuman, an executive director at the health policy research nonprofit KFF.

“It is hard to say, exactly, what any enrollee will save because it depends on their particular plan and their coinsurance,” Neuman said. “But for the many people who are in the plans that charge coinsurance, the lower negotiated price should translate directly to lower out-of-pocket costs.”

Those savings won’t kick in until 2026. Until then, some Medicare enrollees should see relief from drug prices in a new rule starting next year that caps how much they pay annually on drugs to $2,000.

Vice President Kamala Harris, however, wasted no time Thursday campaigning on the new drug deals, especially since no Republicans supported the law, called the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), and it barely passed Congress in 2022.

“Two years ago, as vice president, I was proud to cast the tie-breaking vote that gave Medicare the power to negotiate,” Harris said to cheering crowds. “In the two years since, we’ve been using this new power to lower the price of life-saving medication.”

Prior to dropping out of the race, Biden had centered his reelection bid around lowering health care and drug costs. But the messaging failed to resonate deeply with Americans, in part because the savings have not had widespread reach.

Powerful drug companies unsuccessfully tried to file lawsuits to stop the negotiations. For years, Medicare had been prohibited from such dealmaking. But the drug companies ended up engaging in the talks, and executives had hinted in recent weeks during earnings calls that they don’t expect the new Medicare drug prices to impact their bottom line.

Instead, they warned Thursday that the new law could drive up prices for consumers in other areas. Already, the White House is bracing for a jump in Medicare drug plan premiums next year, in part because of changes under the new law.

“The administration is using the IRA’s price-setting scheme to drive political headlines, but patients will be disappointed when they find out what it means for them,” said Steve Ubl, the president of the lobbying group Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA).

The criticism is ironic, health law expert Rachel Sachs of Washington University said. Drug companies have typically supported capping the price older Americans pay for drugs because they don’t eat the cost — insurers or Americans who pay premiums do.

“It makes it easier for patients to afford their medications. It expands their market. They make more money,” said Sachs, who helped advise the Biden administration on implementation of the law.

Contributing: The Associated Press; Steve Coogan, MyNorthwest

Politics

Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., speaks at a news conference regarding President Donald Trump's pending tarif...

Associated Press

Senate Democrats plan to force a vote on resolution for transparency on deportations to El Salvador

WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate Democrats plan to force a vote in the coming weeks on a resolution to require more transparency from President Donald Trump’s administration about deportations to El Salvador. The resolution, which Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine expects to introduce on Thursday, comes after two votes on Democratic resolutions challenging Trump’s tariffs. It is […]

9 minutes ago

Elon Musk speaks during a cabinet meeting at the White House, Wednesday, April 30, 2025, in Washing...

Associated Press

Musk defends his work as he prepares to wind down at DOGE but gives hazy answers on future

WASHINGTON (AP) — Elon Musk, preparing to step back from his work leading the Department of Government Efficiency, had a request of the reporters gathered at the White House to interview him: Before he would answer any questions, he wanted someone to tell him a joke. The tech billionaire’s request in the Roosevelt Room on […]

1 hour ago

FILE—In this Aug. 16, 2019 file photo, a participant holds a rainbow flag before a gay pride para...

Associated Press

US funds supported Nepal’s growing LGBTQ+ community. Now that money is gone

KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) — The metal gates are padlocked now at the Parichaya Samaj center that advocates for LGBTQ+ rights and supports the queer community in Nepal. A sign at the entry says they are unable to help anymore. The staff and volunteers are gone. Ever since U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration began dismantling the […]

7 hours ago

A person walks to a tent at a homeless encampment in Deschutes National Forest, Wednesday, April 30...

Associated Press

Homeless camp in Oregon national forest to be cleared

BEND, Ore. (AP) — The U.S. Forest Service on Thursday is set to evict dozens of homeless people living in an encampment in a federal forest in central Oregon. The federal agency has been working for years on plans to close part of the Deschutes National Forest near Bend for forest restoration and wildfire mitigation. […]

7 hours ago

FILE - Participants in an immigration rights rally walk under a giant American flag during a march ...

Associated Press

Activists to rally worldwide on May Day, with US protests targeting Trump policies

CHICAGO (AP) — From worker rights rallies to marches for social justice, activists around the globe will kick off May Day demonstrations on Thursday. In some countries, it’s a public holiday honoring labor, but activists planning marches in the United States say much of their message is about fighting back against President Donald Trump’s policies […]

7 hours ago

Austin Kissinger is seen at Gatton Student Center on the University of Kentucky's campus Tuesday, A...

Associated Press

A crackdown on diversity programs is reshaping college graduation ceremonies

PHOENIX (AP) — As a first-generation college student, Austin Kissinger was looking forward to celebrating graduation with others of similar backgrounds who helped each other find their way at the University of Kentucky. Typically, Kentucky students who are the first in their family to graduate from college pick a faculty member to join them in […]

7 hours ago

White House: Drug deals will save taxpayers billions; 144,000 Washington seniors may benefit