Making Healthcare Affordable Again? How Donald Trump intends to make drugs cheaper for Americans

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Making Healthcare Affordable Again? How Donald Trump intends to make drugs cheaper for Americans

In most civilised parts of the world, getting cancer doesn’t also mean bankrupting your family. In America, that’s the plot of one of the greatest TV shows of all time. A single vial of life-saving medication can cost more than a European vacation — business class.

It’s a longstanding joke with a painful punchline: the world’s richest country pays the highest prices for drugs its own companies invented.Donald Trump has never found this funny.Now, in his second coming, Trump has dusted off one of his most populist, politically potent ideas — a policy that would finally stop the US from acting like Big Pharma’s cash cow.

Most Favoured Nation: Trump's Magic Bullet?

The centrepiece of the new policy is the so-called “Most Favoured Nation” (MFN) pricing model, which may sound like a dusty trade clause from a WTO handbook, but is really just code for: If Germany gets a discount, why are we paying full price?The rule mandates that the US government — specifically Medicare — won’t pay more for certain prescription drugs than the lowest price paid by any developed country.

If that sounds like common sense, it’s because it is. Which is why the pharmaceutical industry is already having a meltdown.The initial rollout focuses on Medicare Part B — drugs typically administered in hospitals or clinics, like chemotherapy infusions and injectable treatments. These are the big-ticket items, the ones that quietly drain hundreds of billions from taxpayers while pharmaceutical CEOs take private jets to Aspen.

Pharma’s Worst Nightmare — with a MAGA Twist

Donald Trump vs Big Pharma

Trump isn’t just trying to cut costs. He’s doing it his way. That means a primetime announcement, a promise to save “30% to 80%” on drug prices, and of course, some not-so-subtle jabs at “foreign freeloaders” and “America Last” policies of past presidents.The pharmaceutical lobby has called the MFN model everything from “dangerous” to “unconstitutional.” That’s not new. What is new is that Trump may have the legal tools this time around.

Thanks to provisions in the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act — a law originally intended to tame inflation but now repurposed by the Trump administration like a Swiss Army knife — Medicare finally has price negotiation powers.In other words, the train might not be stoppable this time.

The Legal Landmines — and Political Fireworks

Trump vs Big Pharma

Let’s not pretend this will be smooth. A similar policy from Trump’s first term was blocked by the courts. The pharmaceutical industry is already sharpening its legal claws, ready to sue, stall, and sandbag any rollout.But politically, this is gold. Trump gets to look like a populist crusader standing up to globalist corporations. His team has already framed the MFN order as “America First meets Affordable Healthcare,” a phrase that will likely appear in campaign ads before it appears in hospital billing systems.And if drug prices do drop before the 2026 midterms? Expect the Trump campaign to take full credit — and probably demand the Nobel Prize in Medicine.

Wall Street Winces, Voters Applaud

Unsurprisingly, the announcement rattled the stock market. Pharmaceutical shares dipped sharply, as analysts scrambled to assess whether Trump’s order would stick. But outside Wall Street boardrooms, seniors and working-class voters are cheering.For decades, Americans have been told they pay more so innovation can thrive. Trump’s response? Let Germany pay more for once. After all, isn’t that what NATO’s for?

What’s Next? More Drugs, More Drama

Breaking Good

For now, the MFN pricing applies to a specific set of Medicare-administered drugs.

But insiders suggest an expansion to retail prescriptions isn’t off the table. Nor are tougher negotiations with pharmacy benefit managers — the middlemen who add mystery surcharges to your medication bill like a hotel minibar.If successful, this policy could blow the doors open on wider reforms. Or it could get bogged down in court battles and partisan grandstanding. But either way, it’s the most serious attempt in decades to address one of America’s most quietly devastating economic inequities.

The Bottom Line: A Pill Harder to Swallow — for Big Pharma

Trump’s MFN plan is simple in its logic, aggressive in its framing, and almost gleeful in its defiance of industry norms. Whether it survives the inevitable legal onslaught remains to be seen.But if you’re a pharmaceutical executive used to setting global prices from a Swiss chalet, there’s a new reality setting in:This White House isn’t just tweeting about drug prices.It’s rewriting the invoice.

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