Cue market fundamentalists: "It's absurd that a company has to 'justify' the price of their drugs at all! The 'morality' of the matter is this: private entrepeneurs competing for profits; trading what they created with their MINDS for dollars. Simply allow the free-market to "discipline" those who charge "too much". When consumer sovereignty reigns supreme, everyone wins (except for those who don't). It's like Ayn Rand says in _Atl--."
Well, tell the whole story now instead of just the straw man.
1. At least the drug is available. The
real choice isn't between an expensive drug and a cheap drug. The choice foisted by reality is between an expensive drug and no drug at all. Politicians can huff and puff and bloooooooooooooooooowwwwwwww the house of straw men down in exchange for votes, but that won't conjure more, new, expensive drugs into existence any faster. It will slow it down. End of story. See last century for hundreds of murderous experiments with government command and control of things vs. rate of development.
2. In this particular case, I don't know, but are they necessarily being all that greedy? Do we know the amount of money that company has spent developing this drug? And other drugs that may not be ready yet or have failed? Also, again I don't know about this drug in particular, but are more socialist nations absconding with it because they refuse to pay the higher prices to help amortize all these costs? If they've gotta make up the difference somewhere, well, the US and their population has to shoulder the burden while other nations get a free ride (ironically, all the while slowing development because of not paying more money. Ingrates. I'd use a smiley if it wasn't cumulatively, actually murderous due to slowing technological development.)
The fact remains, to save the most people over the long run, you want to develop drugs the fastest, and that includes both government dumping tens of billions into research as well as every last greedy capitalist striving after new drugs.
Hell, if some drug company were to develop a drug that cured a big chunk of cancer or heart disease or strokes, the governments of the world should just issue them a trillion dollars and be done with it. Good job, you saved more lives than all the blowhard politicians touting socialized medicine ever could (which, ironically,
may be a negative number, the world is worse off for them having existed. Oh, and yeah, it's possible the 98% of Canadians who like their system are wrong. As the guy in Contact pointed out, "95% of the world believes in a supreme being of one form or another". Liking something doesn't mean it's actually the best for you in the long run. The placebo effect on a massive, sad scale.)
Buy that drug now and to hell with slower technological development.