Mexican President-elect Pressures Drug Firms to Contain Prices

Mexican President-elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador on Saturday urged pharmaceutical companies in the country to keep prices down or face losing out on government business to competitors abroad.

During a speech in the western city of Morelia, Lopez Obrador said the government was paying too much for medicine.

For the budget to be able to provide the public with free medicine, this “corruption” would have to end, he added.

Lopez Obrador, a leftist who will take office Dec. 1, said he wanted to support the national pharmaceutical industry.

But he warned the industry his government would seek cheaper medicine elsewhere if firms overcharged and acted as “accomplices to corruption.”

“We’ll open the bidding tenders to buy medicine anywhere in the world that they offer better prices,” he added, estimating that the government spend about 100 billion pesos ($5.31 billion) on medicine each year.

Lopez Obrador, 64, won office in a landslide in July and has pledged to slash public waste and corruption.

Separately, the incoming president reiterated that his government would guarantee prices for certain foods, including milk, beans and corn, in order to support farmers.

Milk would be guaranteed at 8.20 pesos per liter, beans at 14,500 pesos per metric ton and corn for 5,610 pesos per metric ton, he said. “We’re going to pay the producers well,” he added.

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