IPPI has submitted formal comments to the U.S. Department of Commerce regarding its Section 232 investigation of pharmaceutical imports, cautioning against imposing tariffs on medicines and their ingredients.
In our submission, IPPI scholars Mark Schultz, Emily Michiko Morris, and Joshua Kresh explain that imposing such tariffs would have severe negative consequences for American patients, healthcare affordability, and U.S. pharmaceutical innovation leadership.
Drawing on extensive research, particularly Geneva Network’s 2021 study modeling the effects of a 25% pharmaceutical tariff, our comments highlight five critical concerns:
- Higher Drug Prices for Patients: Research demonstrates that pharmaceutical tariffs create a “compounding effect” as each link in the supply chain adds markup to the tariff-inflated price, potentially increasing final costs by up to 80% for consumers.
- Drug Shortages Risk: With over 90% of U.S. prescriptions being for generic drugs and 83% of top generics having no domestic source, tariffs would disrupt existing supply chains and potentially force manufacturers to exit certain market segments.
- Ineffective for Boosting Domestic Manufacturing: Building pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities in the U.S. requires billions of dollars and 5-10 years to accomplish—making tariffs ineffective for addressing immediate or even medium-term supply concerns.
- International Retaliation Threats: Our comments note that major trading partners including China, Brazil, and the EU are already considering pharmaceutical IP rights suspensions and other countermeasures in response to U.S. tariff actions.
- Government Cost Implications: Paradoxically, the U.S. government could end up paying 2-6 times more through Medicare and Medicaid for tariff-inflated drugs than it collects in tariff revenue.
“Imposing tariffs on medicines would be counterproductive to U.S. interests,” said Mark Schultz, Faculty Chair of IPPI. “Such measures would ultimately undermine, rather than enhance, American healthcare security while threatening our position as the world leader in pharmaceutical innovation.”
The full text of IPPI’s comments is available here.