Webinar: Going Through The Roof: Selling Through Insurance
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SeriesBrown Bag Seminars General Economics
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Speaker
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FieldOrganizations and Markets
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LocationOnline
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Date and time
May 13, 2020
14:00 - 15:00
To participate, please send an email to: ae-secr@ese.eur.nl
Rare (orphan) disease drug prices are known to be high. Yearly drug
treatment price levels at 100k USD or higher are not exceptional. There is an
evidence that prices for orphan drugs are inversely related to the prevalence
of the disease (Messori et al., 2010, and Medic et al., 2017). This is hard to
explain by differences in the levels of competition as there is generally little,
if any, competition for most orphan drugs. Moreover, Kesselheim (2016) does not
find a correlation between development costs and drug prices. In this paper, we
develop a simple model in which we compare monopoly pricing decisions when the
monopoly sells orphan drugs directly and when it sells through insurance. We
show that in the latter case, the price is inversely related to the prevalence
of the disease. Given the low prevalence (< 10 per 100000), this means that
the drug prices are indeed likely to go sky high.