http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/35389-think-trump-s-45-percent-tariffs-are-bad-try-obama-s-10-000-percent-tariffs


*Think Trump’s 45 Percent Tariffs Are Bad? Try Obama’s 10,000 Percent
Tariffs*

Dean Baker
March 28, 2016

Lately the media have been going wild mocking Donald Trump’s plans to put
45 percent tariffs on imports from China. They are partly right. It’s not
clever to indiscriminately impose large tariffs on major trading partners
in violation of existing trade agreements.

On the other hand, the projections of economic collapse are almost
certainly way overblown. Furthermore, it would be reasonable to negotiate a
lower value of the dollar against other currencies in order to reduce our
trade deficit, even if the threat of big tariffs might not be the best way
of getting there.
But what is even more striking is the selective concern over tariffs. While
Trump wants to put large tariffs on imports from some of our major trading
partners, President Obama is actively pushing to have far larger tariffs
imposed on a wide range of goods in his trade deals, most importantly the
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). Measures in the TPP pushed by U.S.
negotiators will raise the price of many items by several thousand percent
above the free market price.

If you missed this discussion, it’s because these trade barriers are
referred to as “intellectual property,” which takes the form of patent and
copyright protection. But markets don’t care what term politicians use to
describe a government imposed barrier. If a patent monopoly raises the
price of a protected drug by 10,000 percent it leads to the same sort of
waste and corruption as if the government imposed a tariff of 10,000
percent, except that in the case of prescription drugs, high prices can
also threaten lives.

If a price increase of 10,000 percent sounds high, you haven’t been paying
attention to what the drug industry charges for its new drugs. For example,
the list price for the Hepatitis C drug Sovaldi is $84,000 for a
three-month course of treatment. A recent analysis found that Indian
manufacturers can profitably produce the drug for just $200 per three-month
course of treatment, suggesting a tariff equivalent of more than 40,000
percent.

And we have ample evidence that patent monopolies produce the same sort of
distortions that trade theory predicts from extraordinarily high tariffs.
First, we have a whole army of lobbyists who descend on government
officials constantly pushing for stronger and longer patent protections.
The industry employs a fleet of highly paid lawyers who attempt to
intimidate generic competitors from entering a market, even if legitimate
claims to protection have already expired.

The industry employs a massive number of sales representatives to push
their drugs to doctors. And, we are treated to silly television ads that
try to get patients to pressure doctors into prescribing drugs even when
there is no reason to think they would help them.

And of course there is the enormous waste associated with dealing with high
priced drugs. Patent protected prices cause us to have insurance companies
that must decide on complex payment systems and the new industry of
pharmacy benefit managers that negotiate directly with the drug companies
for both insurance companies and hospitals. There would be no place for
these intermediaries if drugs were selling at free market prices.

Then we get the bad stuff. Drug companies steer their research toward
developing patentable products. Evidence that diet or environmental factors
may be important in treating a condition is generally not pursued. Drug
companies also routinely pay doctors to push their drugs for unapproved
uses. And, they conceal evidence
<http://cepr.net/publications/reports/patent-monopolies-and-the-costs-of-mismarketing-drugs>
that their drugs may be less effective than claimed or potentially harmful.

It is also important to realize that this is not a minor sector of the
economy. We spend more than $400 billion a year on prescription drugs (2.2
percent of GDP). We would likely spend close to one tenth of this amount if
drugs were available in a free market.

We all know the story about how we need patents to finance innovation, but
this is nonsense as even some in the pharmaceutical industry are coming to
recognize. There are plenty of other mechanisms of paying for research. For
example, Andrew Witty, the CEO of GlaxoSmithKline, explicitly called
<http://www.biocentury.com/DailyNews/CurrentIssue#54730> for delinking the
price of drugs from research costs. He proposed a system where the
government pays for drug company research on a cost plus basis, with the
drugs developed then sold as generics.  We already support more than $30
billion a year in biomedical research through the National Institutes of
Health.

So we do face a very real threat of protectionism, but it is in the form of
the Obama administration pushing for stronger and longer patent and related
protections in the TPP and other trade deals. Unfortunately most media
outlets are perfectly happy with protectionism when the main beneficiaries
are drug companies. It is only when someone proposes protectionist measures
with the idea that they could help ordinary workers that they get upset.
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