logo
European governments scramble to interpret Trump's new drug pricing order

European governments scramble to interpret Trump's new drug pricing order

Yahoo14-05-2025

By Maggie Fick
LONDON (Reuters) -European governments are examining whether U.S. President Donald Trump can force them to pay more for prescription medicines, after he issued an executive order to lower U.S. drug prices, roiling the global pharmaceutical industry.
On Monday, Trump took aim at governments paying a fraction of what Americans have to shell out for their medicines, and directed the use of trade policy to force other nations to pay more for prescription drugs.
The Trump administration wants to reduce the gap between U.S. drug prices and those in other developed countries such as many in Europe, where prescription drugs cost, on average, one-third what they do in the United States.
Denmark's industry and business minister Morten Bodskov plans to meet with drugmakers based in his country to discuss the order. He did not give details about the meeting.
"The uncertainty (caused) by the U.S. is bad for the world," he told Reuters. "Danish pharmaceutical companies are among the best in the world and are of great importance to Denmark. The message from Trump does not change that."
The country of six million has benefited from the expansion of Novo Nordisk and the outsize demand for its diabetes drug Ozempic and for Wegovy, one of the powerful new weight-loss drugs singled out by Trump in his push to lower prices.
Novo, Europe's third-largest listed company worth 265 billion euros ($295.74 billion), said it looked forward to the meeting.
In the U.S., drug prices are shaped by complex negotiations involving pharmacy benefit managers that act as middlemen between drugmakers and employer clients and health insurers and have been criticised for inflating costs. In Europe, countries generally have public health systems that negotiate directly with manufacturers and keep costs down.
The European Commission, the EU executive, will assess the impact of Trump's order on European companies, a spokesperson told reporters on Tuesday.
"We know the pharmaceutical industry faces challenges both in the U.S. and the EU," the spokesperson said, noting Commission President Ursula von der Leyen had met with executives last month to address concerns about the threat of U.S. tariffs on medicines.
Trump's effort during his first term -- through a more limited executive order focused on certain drugs covered by the government's Medicare program -- was blocked by a court.
Trump said if drugmakers do not cut prices they could be hit with tariffs. His administration launched a probe last month into pharmaceutical imports as a potential precursor to placing levies on medicines on national security grounds.
"The United States will no longer subsidize the healthcare of foreign countries, which is what we were doing," Trump said on Monday. "I'm not knocking the drug companies. I'm really more knocking the countries than the drug companies."
Although Americans pay significantly more for medicines, they have access to a greater number of treatments. Some 55% more cancer drugs were launched in the U.S. than in the UK over the past three decades, according to a 2024 study in the British Medical Journal.
An AstraZeneca spokesperson said the company supports fairer global sharing of pharmaceutical costs, but that changes must avoid "disrupting patient care, undermining U.S. biotech leadership, or stifling innovation."
CONFIDENTIAL PRICES
Seven drug pricing experts and lawyers told Reuters it is unclear how the administration could legally demand confidential contract details between drugmakers and governments. That information would be needed as Trump's order calls for giving drugmakers price targets within a month.
Strict cost containment measures and reimbursement policies prevent drugmakers from charging Britain's financially strapped state-funded National Health Service more for new drugs, said Daniel Howdon, a health economist at the University of Leeds.
"Unless there is some sort of overhaul of UK law or policy, Trump's order will not be able to achieve higher prices," he said.
A spokesperson for Germany's health ministry told Reuters it was not possible to predict how the U.S. order may be implemented.
Germany has a "clearly defined framework for price negotiations on medicines between statutory health insurance and the pharmaceutical industry," the spokesperson said.
The call for developed countries to pay more for drugs so the U.S. can pay less comes as worries grow that uncertainty caused by Trump's whiplash trade war will dampen the 27-nation bloc's already-weak economy.
Even with the threat of tariffs, governments may be unable and unwilling to spend more on medicines, particularly as populations age and healthcare budgets tighten, UBS analyst Trung Huynh said.
The UK government does not publish the prices it pays for NHS drugs, but a source at the UK's Department of Health and Social Care said prices for some treatments are about a quarter of those paid by the U.S.
The DHSC did not respond to a request for comment.
Still, a source at a European drugmaker told Reuters the Trump administration could still exert pressure to try to force governments to alter their longstanding pricing practices embedded in national health systems.
"I read this as him showing pharma all of the negotiating tools he has at his disposal," said Anna Kaltenboeck, a health economist at Verdant Research, "and giving them some credible threat based on his willingness to impose tariffs so far."
($1 = 0.8961 euros)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Judge: Trump administration can dismantle Institute of Museum and Library Services
Judge: Trump administration can dismantle Institute of Museum and Library Services

Los Angeles Times

time27 minutes ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Judge: Trump administration can dismantle Institute of Museum and Library Services

WASHINGTON — A federal judge on Friday denied a request by the American Library Assn. to halt the Trump administration's further dismantling of an agency that funds and promotes libraries across the country, saying that recent court decisions suggested his court lacked jurisdiction to hear the matter. U.S. District Judge Richard Leon had previously agreed to temporarily block the Republican administration, saying that plaintiffs were likely to show that Trump doesn't have the legal authority to unilaterally shutter the Institute of Museum and Library Services, which was created by Congress. But in Friday's ruling, Leon wrote that as much as the 'Court laments the Executive Branch's efforts to cut off this lifeline for libraries and museums,' recent court decisions suggested that the case should be heard in a separate court dedicated to contractual claims. He cited the Supreme Court's decision allowing the administration to cut hundreds of millions of dollars in teacher-training money despite a lower court order barring the cuts, saying that cases seeking reinstatement of federal grants should be heard in the Court of Federal Claims. The American Library Assn. and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees filed a lawsuit to stop the administration from gutting the institute after President Trump signed a March 14 executive order that refers to it and several other federal agencies as 'unnecessary.' The agency's appointed acting director then placed many staff members on administrative leave, sent termination notices to most of them, began canceling grants and contracts and fired all members of the National Museum and Library Services Board. The institute has roughly 75 employees and issued more than $266 million in grants last year. However, a Rhode Island judge's order prohibiting the government from shutting down the institute in a separate case brought by several states remains in place. The administration is appealing that order as well.

Trump says Elon Musk will face ‘very serious consequences' if he funds Dems in future elections
Trump says Elon Musk will face ‘very serious consequences' if he funds Dems in future elections

New York Post

time27 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Trump says Elon Musk will face ‘very serious consequences' if he funds Dems in future elections

WASHINGTON — President Trump warned Saturday that his former ally Elon Musk will face 'very serious consequences' if he starts bankrolling Democratic candidates for office after their nasty public split over a Republican spending bill working its way through Congress. 'If he does, he'll have to pay the consequences for that,' Trump told NBC News' Kristin Welker in an interview. 'He'll have to pay very serious consequences if he does that,' the president added. Advertisement 3 Musk and Trump have been feuding after the Tesla CEO spoke out on the president's 'big beautiful' bill. AP 'Is there anything else you just want people to know about the status,' Welker asked. 'No, not at all. We're doing great,' Trump replied. 'The bill is great. It looks like we're going to get it passed. Looks strongly like we're going to get it passed.' Advertisement 3 Musk was part of cabinet meetings during the first few months of Trump's second term. Molly Riley/White House / SWNS Musk knocked Trump during a multi-day X tirade over the debt increases contained in the 'big beautiful bill' earlier this week and said without his hundreds of millions of dollars in contributions, the president would never have been re-elected in 2024. Here is the latest on Donald Trump and Elon Musk's feud He also claimed credit for delivering the GOP a 53-47 majority in the Senate — and holding onto its majority in the House. Advertisement 3 Trump has hit back at Musk's comments in the ongoing feud. The Tesla and SpaceX billionaire contributed more than a quarter of a billion dollars to Republican candidates in the 2024 cycle, federal campaign filings show.

Musk Deletes His ‘Really Big Bomb' Claiming Trump Appears in Epstein Files
Musk Deletes His ‘Really Big Bomb' Claiming Trump Appears in Epstein Files

Gizmodo

time27 minutes ago

  • Gizmodo

Musk Deletes His ‘Really Big Bomb' Claiming Trump Appears in Epstein Files

In the middle of their very public breakup, a scorned Elon Musk decided to drop a 'really big bomb' on Donald Trump, accusing the president of appearing in the Epstein files. Sometime Saturday, it seems the billionaire decided he wanted to try to disarm that bomb, as he deleted his posts claiming that Trump has links to the famous child sex trafficker. Musk and Trump had been acting catty for a couple of days by the time Musk went nuclear, going back and forth over Musk's opposition to Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill'—a proposal that includes the largest cuts to Medicaid and food assistance programs in history. Musk objected to the bill, but not because it would be devastating to low- and middle-income households, but seemingly rather because it was going to hurt his own bottom line by ending electric vehicle tax credits that Tesla benefits from. Musk tried to kill the bill by posting incessantly about it, creating a rift among Republicans who will essentially need everyone in the party to be on board in order to get the thing passed. Trump, annoyed, took some shots at Musk for his dissent, which led to Musk just blowing the whole thing up. He said Trump appeared in the Epstein files and 'That is the real reason they have not been made public.' Funnily, he also doubled down by saying, 'Mark this post for the future. The truth will come out.' Those posts are now deleted—though have, of course, been archived, screenshotted, and quoted many times over. So, too, has a post in which Musk supported the idea that Trump should be impeached. He hasn't gotten around to taking down his post claiming that Trump's tariffs will cause a recession, so, it's clear the two aren't fully ready to make up, even if there is a de-escalation. We're also starting to get more of a picture of what has been happening behind the scenes while these two air out each other in public. A report published Saturday by the Washington Post claims that Trump was 'dejected' during Musk's crash out, and tried to rationalize Musk's behavior by calling him 'a big-time drug addict.' Musk had apparently been acting erratically for quite some time (not exactly a shock if you've scrolled through his posts on Twitter for like, 30 seconds), and a reported physical conflict with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent that saw Musk supposedly throw his shoulder into Bessent was the breaking point where the billionaire started to get pushed out, per the Post. Trump opted not to pour gasoline on the situation—a shocking decision from a guy not exactly known for his restraint—but also is apparently not interested in reconciling with Musk. An official within the administration told the Post that even if they do make up, 'It'll never be the same.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store