Other countries don't solve the problem via re-importation.
Re-importation shouldn't be illegal, but it shouldn't be necessary - it's really kinda dumb. Other countries have solved this problem by making healthcare universal, and forming a bulk purchasing group which strong-arms providers into charging something the system can bear. The end user doesn't have to care how much that is, because most developed countries simply pay for the drugs people need in the first place.
The ideal way to obsolete this problem is to follow their lead - get Medicare for All to happen and restore Medicare's ability to negotiate the price of drugs directly with manufacturers.
Then nobody has to pay for the drugs directly in the first place.
Strong arming is the right term. United Healthcare in the US has 40 million members. Bigger than the entire population of Canada. Yet they can’t negotiate prices anywhere as low.
the bulk prices developed countries in Europe are paying is still much greater than some countries that have a truly free market system. For example, I lived in Tanzania and all drugs were imported and all of them over the counter. Drugs that literally cost thousands of dollars a month in America without insurance would usually come to around $5-10.
I doubt the American people (or American industry) would ever allow such a truly free market system to transpire, but I know for a fact it can work.
Labor is cheaper in Tanzania obviously, but even if you adjusted for the more expensive labor, a free market system (vs the crony capitalist system we have now) would probably be 10-100x cheaper.
Also, even controlling for median wage, the drugs are vastly cheaper in Tanzania vs America. A median worker there might make around $5-10 in wage, so most drugs for a month supply would be only a day of work. Median hourly wage in America of $15 would correspond to drug prices between $60-120 dollars, much cheaper than most medications without insurance. In reality, it should be much cheaper, as the marginal cost can be reduced a lot through online pharmacies (remember that $5-10 cost in Tanzania not only factors in product cost and labor cost, but a staggeringly inefficient distribution network).
In short, I don't believe there's any theoretical reason why generic drugs couldn't be dirt cheap and affordable by all in a free market system. After all, capitalism has done a stellar job at reducing the cost of consumer goods over time, and medication should be no different.
If everyone could buy lightly regulated pills from alibaba, it would definitely be a win from a utility standpoint. But of course such a thing would never fly, as maximizing total utility doesn't get people elected. Everyone might win except one guy who died from bad pills and the whole gig would be up, even though the total utility function of every citizen in aggregate was being correctly maximized.
The strong needs of the few always trumps the weak needs of the many. If everyone paid one $1 dollar per day in order to prevent one death, I'm sure some politician would call it a massive win, even though that's an aggregate loss of 100bn dollars annually and the money saved generated more utility than the utility lost by that one guy dying.
Unfortunately, human beings are unable to make correct statistical/utilitarian decisions and support so many policies that are a net negative utility wise.
Drugs in countries like Tanzania are cheap because drug companies don’t think they can get more money out of it, it’s more of a charity project. They offer them to developing countries well below cost - Tanzania is the 15th poorest country in the world with a GDP per capita of $500 (2011). It’s not an example of a free market.
I'm not sure that's true. Most of the medication I came across came from third rate Russian or Indian suppliers. I highly doubt the sales of drugs from these countries (also poor countries) to another poor country (Tanzania) was charity.
It ain't a charity: after the initial development, drug production is usually very cheap.
Aligning prices with purchasing power allows pharmaceutical companies to get _something_ out of the markets they'd get nothing out of. And with large numbers, that something might turn out to be a bit more.
Third rate Indian suppliers? I’m not sure if you’re implying that the price is low or the quality is poor. If it’s the latter, you don’t know much about Indian pharma companies. Btw, Indian pharma companies selling high quality anti retro viral drugs to African countries at low prices is why HIV is relatively under control right now.
You need to distinguish between drug development and production.
Sure production cost is usually low and that technically allows to sell to poor countries essentially at cost plus a tiny margin.
But that's only half the story. Drugs need to be developed. From idea to market only a tiny fraction of medication makes it. You need studies ovet studies, and most of the time a drug does not make it through that process because it's ineffective or dangerous or both. The few that make it need to compensate for the cost of this process, not just their own but all of those that didn't make it.
So, in "rich" countries, a pill that costs $0.10 to produce can easily cost $1000. That's a necessity to finance the whole process of getting there.
After that is all done and established, sure, you may get that same pill for $1 since it's either that or no sale. But that does not mean the whole system would work for $1 per pill everywhere in the world. Then the pill would not exist in the first place.
See also: region locking in video games. Again, the development costs vastly outweigh the marginal cost of producing an extra unit to sell, so they sell the product at whatever the local market will bear, which breaks down if richer markets have access to supply from poorer ones.
Re-importation shouldn't be illegal, but it shouldn't be necessary - it's really kinda dumb. Other countries have solved this problem by making healthcare universal, and forming a bulk purchasing group which strong-arms providers into charging something the system can bear. The end user doesn't have to care how much that is, because most developed countries simply pay for the drugs people need in the first place.
The ideal way to obsolete this problem is to follow their lead - get Medicare for All to happen and restore Medicare's ability to negotiate the price of drugs directly with manufacturers.
Then nobody has to pay for the drugs directly in the first place.