What Stands Between Bezos, Buffett, and Dimon and a Health-Care Fix
Photoillustration: 731; Photographer: Getty Images
With the U.S. health-care system appearing incapable of taming runaway price inflation, Jeff Bezos, Warren Buffett, and Jamie Dimon think they can do better. Perhaps only titans with the resources of Amazon.com, Berkshire Hathaway, and JPMorgan Chase can contemplate such a thing. But changing the convoluted practices that determine drug costs will require them to take on powerful players who are already fighting among themselves.
Pharmaceutical companies have come under fire for the ever-rising five- and six-figure prices they charge for life-sustaining drugs. They say those numbers don’t tell the whole story, because middlemen—the pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) and the insurance companies they work for—collect discounts that aren’t always passed on to patients. The industry is so emphatic about this argument that its lobbying group started a consumer website in January effectively waging war against the PBMs. Big Pharma’s battle cry represents a previously unthinkable rift between two big forces in health care that for years quietly settled their differences away from public view.
