Trump is toying with us, but his 200% tariff threat could still harm sick Australians
Large tariffs would, of course, present serious problems for pharmaceutical companies in countries that export drugs to the US, with flow-on effects for national economies. This includes Australia. With $2.2 billion in pharmaceutical exports to the US last year, we have a lot at stake.
Trump says he will allow some time for companies to move their manufacturing to the US before the tariffs kick in – perhaps up to a year and a half – but it takes many years to establish and staff high-tech facilities, and there would be huge costs involved.
If Trump decided the tariffs would apply to ingredients as well as to finished pharmaceutical products, this could also cause chaos in supply chains, with results difficult to predict. American drug companies faced with inflated manufacturing costs could increase drug prices in markets that allow it and threaten to withdraw them from others, such as Australia.
The Trump administration is unlikely to introduce tariffs of this size, given the effects they would have on the drug costs in the US for health insurers and consumers. The US already spends far more on medicines compared with other OECD countries – $US1432 ($2190) per capita on retail pharmaceuticals in 2021, well over double Australia's per capita expenditure of $US647 ($990). The RAND Corporation found that US drug prices in 2022 were, on average, 2.78 times higher than 33 comparison countries, and more than four times higher for new, brand-name drugs. Tariffs of 200 per cent would sharply increase costs for imported drugs, many of which can't easily be replaced with alternatives. Trump would face immediate and intense domestic pressure to remove them.
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But in line with other aspects of Trump's trade policy, it's likely the threat of astronomical tariffs will be used to extract concessions that countries wouldn't agree to under normal circumstances – and haven't agreed to in past trade negotiations. It seems that as part of its trade deal with the US announced in May, the UK has already agreed to 'endeavour to improve the overall environment for pharmaceutical companies operating in the United Kingdom' in exchange for preferential treatment for tariffs on pharmaceuticals and pharmaceutical ingredients.
What concessions are countries likely to be asked to make? The US agenda is not very clear, partly because the results of a Department of Commerce investigation into pharmaceutical imports are yet to be announced. But the US agenda is also a rat's nest of conflicting policy objectives.
The US pharmaceutical industry has been agitating about our Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, which subsidises medicines for Australians. As a monopsony (a single buyer), the PBS can keep prices well below those in the US. In a letter to the US Trade Representative in March, the peak organisation representing branded US drug companies, PhRMA, complained that Australia's pharmaceutical pricing policies were 'egregious and discriminatory' barriers to trade.
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