A New Drug Pricing Social Contract: The Great American Drug Deal

David Beier
5 min readFeb 18, 2020

By Alex Karnal and David Beier

In The Great American Drug Deal, biotech investor Peter Kolchinsky outlines a vision for the future of the pharmaceutical industry. It’s a future in which the interests of society align both with the firms developing new medicines and the patients who depend on new treatments and cures.

Now that might sound far-fetched when you consider no industry stands in lower regard among Americans than the pharmaceutical sector, according to Gallup’s latest data. That’s exactly why Kolchinksy’s contributions are timely. In compulsively readable prose, he is proposing a new social contract between biopharmaceutical companies and American patients. In its substance, the contract includes incentives for innovation, avoids counterproductive price controls, opens treatment access by reducing what patients pay out of pocket, and intensifies government intervention in emerging therapies like gene and cell therapies.

Kolchinsky’s cutting-edge ideas should generate a broad discussion on the principles we should adopt to ensure any new policies balance the competing interests of a web of stakeholders; from scientists to patients, insurance, government, hospitals and doctors, to name just a few. The discussion should revolve around a simple question: does the new paradigm…

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David Beier
David Beier

Written by David Beier

Managing Director, Bay City Capital, San Francisco, CA. Previously Chief Domestic Policy to Vice President Al Gore. Senior corporate officer DNA and Amgen

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