Moderna’s expected 400% hike
for its COVID vaccine sparked outrage on Capitol Hill. The pharmaceutical giant could raise the price
of the vaccine from its current $26 per dose to between $110 and $130 per shot, according to The Wall Street Journal.
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.)
blasted Moderna, noting that the company is getting rich off of a vaccine that
was developed with financial aid from taxpayers. “This vaccine was discovered
in partnership with the NIH, with a government agency supported by the
taxpayers of this country,” Sanders told CNN on Wednesday. “In addition, the
government put $1.9 billion into research and development for Moderna and then
guaranteed Moderna billions of dollars in sales.”
Last year, Moderna raked in
$18.4 billion from sales of its COVID vaccine. “They’re going to charge
whatever it is. 110 bucks a vaccine. It costs about $2 to produce that
vaccine,” Sanders countered. “So, the taxpayers of this country who put money
into the vaccine in order to protect the health and lives of the American
people are now creating billionaires in an industry — in a company that it’s going
to quadruple prices for the American people,” the senator added. “That is
outrageous, that is unacceptable, and we’ve got to do something about that.”
Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel
defended the anticipated price hike, telling the Journal: “I would think this
type of pricing is consistent with the value.” The move is similar to the one
made by Moderna’s rival, Pfizer, which raised the price of its COVID vaccine
that was developed jointly with BioNTech by some 400%.
Last month, Senators
Elizabeth Warren (D.-Mass.) and Peter Welch (D-Vt.) sent a letter to Pfizer CEO
Albert Bourla calling the price hike “pure and deadly greed.” Pfizer, according
to the senators, was guilty of “unseemly profiteering.” “We urge you to back
off from your proposed price increases and ensure COVID-19 vaccines are
reasonably priced and accessible to people across the United States,” they
wrote.
Both the Moderna and the
Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines, which use mRNA technology, has been made available to
Americans for free after the doses were purchased by the federal government. Both
companies plan to shift to commercial distribution of the vaccines once their
contracts with the federal government expires.
In July, the government
reached a deal with Moderna to pay $26 per dose of the updated COVID booster
shot. Previously, the government paid between $15 and $16 per dose. This past
summer, the government agreed to pay Pfizer a little more than $30 per dose —
up from $19.50 per dose in 2020 contracts. “We enter 2023 in a great position,
with significant momentum across our clinical pipeline, a highly energized team
and a strong balance sheet of over $18 billion of cash and cash equivalents,”
Bancel said in a press release Monday.
Moderna said it anticipated
making a minimum of $5 billion in vaccine sales this year.
-Ariel Zilber, NY Post
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