WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Monday signed a sweeping executive order setting a 30-day deadline for drugmakers to lower the cost of prescription drugs in the U.S. or face new limits over what the government will pay.
The order calls on the health department, led by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., to broker new price tags for drugs. If a deal is not reached, a new rule will kick in that will tie the price of what the U.S. pays for medications to lower prices paid by other countries.
''We're going to equalize,'' Trump said during a Monday morning press conference. ''We're all going to pay the same. We're going to pay what Europe pays.''
It's unclear what — if any — impact the Republican president's executive order will have on millions of Americans who have private health insurance. The federal government has the most power to shape the price it pays for drugs covered by Medicare and Medicaid.
The federal government spends hundreds of billions of dollars on prescription drugs, injectables, transfusions and other medications every year through Medicare, which covers nearly 70 million older Americans. Medicaid, meanwhile, covers nearly 80 million poor and disabled people in the U.S.
Ahead of the signing, the nation's leading pharmaceutical lobby on Sunday pushed back against Trump's plan, calling it a ''bad deal'' for American patients. Drugmakers have long argued that any threats to their profits could impact the research they do to develop new drugs.
''Importing foreign prices will cut billions of dollars from Medicare with no guarantee that it helps patients or improves their access to medicines,'' Stephen J. Ubl, the president and CEO of PhRMA, said in a statement. ''It jeopardizes the hundreds of billions our member companies are planning to invest in America, making us more reliant on China for innovative medicines.''
Trump's so-called ''most favored nation'' approach to Medicare drug pricing has been controversial since he first tried to implement it during his first term. He signed a similar executive order in the final weeks of his presidency, which called for the U.S. to only pay a lower price that other countries pay for some drugs — injectables or cancer drugs given through infusions — administered in a doctor's office.