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Building the weak hand of the state: tracing the market boundaries of high pharmaceutical prices in France
Author(s)
Date Issued
2022
Date Available
2023-03-20T15:24:32Z
Abstract
Prices for new medications have strongly increased over the last decades, reaching levels that could endanger healthcare insurance systems. Focusing on the French case, this article builds on the structural approach of business power and investigates how this situation results from the construction of market boundaries that created unassailable spaces for high pricing. Starting from the 1990s, it traces how high drug prices relied on the construction of a market setting first designed to increase pharmaceutical prices, in which the negotiating position of the state was deliberately weakened. But the politics of maintaining such high drug pricing quickly required reshaping the boundaries of the pharmaceutical market and concentrating the favourable negotiation framework on a small number of innovative medicines. Most recently, the spiralling of prices for these medicines have necessitated yet another revisiting of these market boundaries. High drug prices do not result from direct business power by the pharmaceutical sector; rather, the pharmaceutical sector depends on boundary-work performed in cooperation with state institutions to carve out domains for favourable market pricing. Emphasising the politics of this boundary-work thus ultimately also signals its potential reversibility.
Sponsorship
European Commission Horizon 2020
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Journal
New Political Economy
Volume
27
Issue
5
Start Page
837
End Page
850
Copyright (Published Version)
2022 The Authors
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
1356-3467
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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Name
Bourgeron and Geiger New Political Economy final draft.pdf
Size
253.61 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
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