Budget office: $177B in added costs from Trump drug plan
The estimates from the nonpartisan
The Trump administration disputed the budget office's conclusion, saying its proposed drug pricing regulation should result in savings.
Under the administration's plan, drugmaker rebates now paid to insurance companies and their middlemen would instead go directly to seniors in Medicare's Part D program when they fill their prescriptions.
Rebates are a largely unseen part of the complex world of drug pricing.
Drugmakers pay the money in part to get favorable placement for their medications among a health plan's covered drugs. Insurers say rebates help keep premiums in check. But when patients go to fill their prescriptions, their copays are usually calculated based on the list price of medications, not the discounted price after rebates.
Awarding the discounts directly to patients would reduce copays for many Medicare beneficiaries.
But CBO concluded that drug companies are unlikely to lower list prices across the board in response to the administration plan. Instead, they would reimburse pharmacies for discounts provided to individual seniors as they fill their prescriptions.
The budget office said the bottom line would be an increase in premiums, which are split between the government and seniors. Because the government subsidizes about 75% of the cost, that would add
"Some beneficiaries would pay lower prices on their prescription drugs, and for some beneficiaries, those reductions would be greater than their premium increases," the CBO analysis said. "For other beneficiaries — namely those who use few drugs or drugs without significant rebates — the premium increase would outweigh the price reductions."
But CBO said seniors who can't afford their copays now would be clear winners. They'd be better able to stay on their medications, and that could reduce Medicare hospital and outpatient spending by about
Responding to the budget office, the
The rebate regulation is scheduled to take effect next year, and does not require direct congressional approval. However, congressional opposition could complicate things for the administration.
Leading
Online:
CBO analysis: https://tinyurl.com/yy3tz2uu



Art Van Furniture Extends Employee Pricing To Metro Detroit Residents Hit Hard By This Week’s Flooding
Rubio: More than 200 days after Hurricane Michael, residents in the Panhandle have had enough
Advisor News
- Using digital retirement modeling to strengthen client understanding
- Fear of outliving money at a record high
- Cognitive decline is a growing threat to financial security
- Two lessons career changers wish they knew before starting the CFP journey
- Americans less confident about retirement as worries grow
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- CareScout Joins Ensight™ Intelligent Quote LTC & Life Marketplace
- Axonic Insurance Annuities, Built for Banks, Broker-Dealers and RIAs, Now Available through WealthVest.
- Allianz Life Adds New Accumulation-Focused Fixed Index Annuities
- Allianz Life adds new accumulation-focused FIAs
- Industry objects to ‘tone and tenor’ of draft NAIC Annuity Buyer’s Guide
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- After health insurance subsidies end, 30,000 Idahoans will be uninsured, government report says
- Georgia’s ACA enrollment plunges, raising concerns for rural hospitals
- Pending cuts to Georgia Medicaid payments could affect children who need therapy
- Orange schools, teachers union at impasse over health insurance
- Miami judge sides with cancer patient, orders insurer to cover pricey treatment
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News
- Agam Capital and 1823 Partners Announce Strategic Partnership to Provide Life Insurers with an End-to-End Value Chain Solution
- AM Best Revises Outlooks to Positive for Western & Southern Financial Group, Inc. and Its Subsidiaries
- Principal Financial Group Announces First Quarter 2026 Results
- SBLI Enhances its OmniTrak Term to Deliver Faster Decisions, More Client Coverage, and Improved Pricing
- Life insurance premium surges, but coverage is still falling short for many
More Life Insurance News