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>The interesting thing to note that the company in the article, Alexion, is not even an unusually lucrative company. In 2015 its operating income was $536 million on 2.6 billion of revenue, or about a 20% operating profit margin. ...what. 20% margin isn't good nowadays? And why on earth are we comparing this company to a tech giant, they're not in the same world when it comes to how they operate. Of course google's going to look better in a lot of these terms, it's google (and i'd argue a monopoly). I mean at what point do we say, actually these biotech companies are plenty profitable? There's so much handwringing about how if we hurt these companies in anyway then all these sick people will die. It's just not true. Why don't we take the S&P 500, a Biotech Index and ALXN and put them on a chart: https://www.google.com/finance?chdnp=1&chdd=1&chds=1&chdv=1&... Well damn, looks like despite all their huge R&D costs, only 20% margins, so on and so on they are doing pretty damn well. Honestly, are we looking at the same chart? These companies are MILKING sick people and we're afraid to intervene. Markets don't work in life and death scenarios because people would pay anything. This is a case that begs for regulation and even with it these companies are going to be just fine. |
Over time, would limiting the potential profits in life-saving drugs increase or decrease the number of life-saving drugs developed?
In an economy where people can choose to work in any field, and investors can choose to invest their money in any field - what better way is there to allocate the people and money resources than by letting people voice how valuable something is with their wallets? Do you want to force someone to buy a third car instead of buying a new drug treatment?
If you understand the invisible hand theory (actually understand it, not just the everyman's definition) I think it's difficult to (a) argue against in general and (b) argue against for certain life-saving industries especially.