The critics say it's immoral for Bayer to profit from fear and disease.
After all, other pharmaceutical manufacturers have said they will
give away their antibiotics in the fight against anthrax.
Tommy Thompson of the Department of Health and Human Services even
threatened to ignore Bayer's patent and allow other companies to
produce a generic form of Cipro without compensation for Bayer.
Is it immoral for Bayer to profit from the misfortunes of others?
I don't know.
But I do know why pharmaceutical companies get started. I know why
investors invest in pharmaceutical companies. I know why
pharmaceutical companies take risks on unknown compounds. I know why
they spend billions on research, much of which will come to
nothing.
All these things take place because pharmaceutical companies
EXIST to profit from the misfortunes of others. Really. That's what
they do. And in our system, you make profits by reducing misfortune
or preventing it. It works pretty well.
Money and profit are not the ONLY motivations. There is great
satisfaction in knowing that your insight and labor and struggle and
failures prevent someone from dying. But without the money, there
will be less effort. That is one of the reasons Poland, China, and
Cuba don't lead the world in pharmaceutical innovation. America and
Germany do. And the profit motive has driven the pharmaceutical
revolution of the last 100 years.
But don't drug companies make enough money already, you ask?
I don't know. I don't know the definition of enough.
But I do know what happens when we lower the profits from discovering
new drugs. We reduce the incentives to find the yet-to-be-discovered
drugs of the next 100 years that can eradicate cancer, heart disease,
AIDS and Alzheimer's.
It may seem compassionate for the government to take away Bayer's
profits. But politicians always like policies where the benefits
come today and the costs come tomorrow.
But still. But still. Isn't it wrong for people sick with anthrax
to have to pay for something that can save their lives?
It would be nice if new drug discoveries were like manna that fell
from heaven. But they aren't. They come from hours of toil and
millions of dollars.
And when we force or intimidate drug companies to give away their
products, we're not really making the drugs free. We're making
investors pay for them. And we're also punishing the future
generations pay. They won't get the drugs that would have been
discovered had we left incentives in place.
I'd rather have Congress tax all of us to pay for the needed drugs, or have
charities cover the cost of drugs for people who cannot afford them.
Only politicians can claim that there is such a thing as free drugs.
The rest of us should know better.