Among the features of the agreement: Medicaid programs will have access to “most favored nation” pricing, or the lowest price among developed countries, moving forward. That could lead to better prices for the program that serves more than 70 million people, a senior administration official told reporters on a call on Sept. 30.
Prescription Drug Spending
The United States spends hundreds of billions of dollars a year on prescription drugs. Americans pay more for prescription drugs than patients in other countries, nearly three times as much on average, according to a 2024 government report.Officials say that the high prices result in about 75 percent of global pharmaceutical profits coming from Americans. An argument advanced in favor of this pricing is that it funds pharmaceutical research and development.
“The United States is done subsidizing the health care of the rest of the world,” President Donald Trump said on Sept 29.
Chris Klomp, deputy administrator at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid and director of Medicare, said that the agreement does not feature any price caps.
“[Pfizer] can price however they'd like,” he said. “We’re simply asking them, and they are committing, not to undercut us in other countries.”
“Importing foreign prices from socialist countries would be a bad deal for American patients and workers.”
Tariffs
Trump asked companies over the summer to lower drug prices, including not charging Medicaid patients any more than the lowest prices in other developed nations.If they declined to do so, he said in letters to them, the government “will deploy every tool” in its arsenal to protect American families from “continued abusive drug pricing practices.”
Trump sent letters to 17 companies, including Pfizer.
“Tariff is the most powerful tool to motivate behaviors, Mr. President, and clearly motivated ours,” he said.
New Website
A new direct-to-consumer website, dubbed Trump Rx, will also give people access to drugs at reduced prices, officials said.“No more Canadian detours to purchase drugs more inexpensively at our neighbor,” Klomp said.
The website is expected to be public in early 2026, a senior administration official said on the call on Sept. 29. Some details of the website are still being worked out. The framework, as of now, is that people can go to the site, type in the drug they’re looking for, and be redirected to the place where they can buy that directly, either through a manufacturer or a manufacturer’s designee.
According to the White House, the dermatitis ointment Eucrisa will be made available at an 80 percent discount, the migraine treatment Zavzpret will be sold at a 50 percent discount, and a rheumatoid arthritis medication will be on the site at a 40 percent discount.
Other Companies
Trump said, “We’re working with other major pharmaceutical companies to secure similar agreements.”A senior administration official told reporters on the call that deals have already been reached with multiple other manufacturers.
“Then there are manufacturers with whom we’re actively negotiating, and then there are manufacturers sitting in a queue that we still have to get to,” the official said.
Other than Pfizer, the companies that received a letter from Trump are: AbbVie, Amgen, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol Myers Squibb, Eli Lilly, EMD Serono, Genentech, Gilead, GSK, Johnson & Johnson, Merck, Novartis, Novo Nordisk, Regeneron, and Sanofi.
The only company besides Pfizer that Trump mentioned by name was Eli Lilly.
“We believe that every American deserves access to the medicines they need, regardless of where they live or what they earn. Today’s announcement from the White House underscores the urgency of making medicines more affordable and we welcome all efforts that prioritize patients,” a spokesperson from the company told The Epoch Times in an email.
“Lilly has been in active discussions with the administration to further expand patient access, preserve innovation and promote affordability to our medicines. We do not have specific details to share at this time but look forward to providing an update in collaboration with the administration soon.”







