Who benefits the most from the perplexing health-care system in America?

Who benefits the most from the perplexing health-care system in America?



Who profits most from America’s baffling health-care​ system?

ON OCTOBER ​4TH more than 75,000 employees of Kaiser Permanente, ⁢a large health-care chain, began a three-day strike. The walkout was the biggest in the history of America’s⁤ health sector, and ⁤called attention​ to the staffing ‍shortages plaguing the country’s hospitals ⁣and clinics. In ‍the same week ten drugmakers said they would negotiate medicine prices with Medicare, the public health-care system for​ the elderly, following legislation which⁣ all but forced‌ them ​to. It will be the first time that companies have haggled over prices with ⁣the government.

These ⁣events are symptoms of the deeper malaise in America’s‌ dysfunctional ⁣health-care system. The country spends about $4.3trn​ a year on keeping citizens⁤ in good nick. That is ‍equivalent ⁤to⁣ 17% of GDP,⁢ twice as much as the average in ‌other rich economies.‌ And yet American adults⁤ live shorter lives and American infants die more often than in similarly‍ affluent places. ​Pharmaceutical firms and hospitals attract much ‌of ​the public ire for ⁣the inflated costs.‌ Much less attention is‍ paid ⁤to a small number of⁣ middlemen who extract far bigger rents from the system’s complexity.

Over the ‌past decade these firms have quietly increased their presence in America’s vast health-care⁣ industry. They do not‌ make drugs and have not, until recently, treated patients. They are the ⁣intermediaries—insurers,‍ pharmacies, drug distributors and pharmacy-benefit managers‍ (PBMs)—sitting between patients and their ‍treatments. In 2022 ⁢the combined revenue of the nine ⁢biggest middlemen—call them⁣ big health—equated to around 45% of ⁢America’s health-care bill, up from 25% in‌ 2013. Big health accounts for ⁤eight of the top ‌25 companies by revenue ‍in⁣ the⁣ S&P 500 index ⁤of America’s leading stocks, compared with four for big tech and none ⁢for⁤ big‌ pharma.

2023-10-08 12:48:45
Post from www.economist.com
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