This week, Roosevelt President and CEO Elizabeth Wilkins joined five other former Biden officials on the Law & Political Economy Project blog to offer perspectives on where the administration could have gone further in its progressive governing efforts.
- Wilkins wrote about the Federal Trade Commission’s research into the role of pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs)—intermediaries between drug manufacturers and insurance companies—in raising drug costs and underpaying independent pharmacies.
- While the administration made strides in lowering prescription drug prices (thanks to the Inflation Reduction Act), one powerful tool was left on the table: The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services had the authority to scrutinize PBMs’ unfair contracts with pharmacies—but chose not to intervene.
- “Policy solutions must be commensurate to the urgency of the problem the public faces,” Wilkins writes. “A whole-of-government approach means acting with the ambition Americans want from every agency, and rebuilding our muscle for doing big things.”
Other Biden-era policy officials also shared insights:
- Roosevelt Board Member K. Sabeel Rahman, who led the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, writes that cleaning up after the current administration’s dismantling of government won’t be enough—progressives should be “imagining the formation and reformation of agencies themselves, looking to create anew their authorities, missions, jurisdictions, and structures.”
- Bharat Ramamurti, former deputy director of the National Economic Council, writes on housing: “It can take years for new investments in housing supply to begin reducing costs.” He urges policymakers to “pursue more creative options” like allowing homebuyers to assume lower-rate mortgages and investing in affordable public housing for renters.
- “Care work is the foundation that enables all other work,” writes former Deputy Director of the Gender Policy Council Shilpa Phadke. She discusses “addressing the caregiving crisis through an industrial policy framework”—an idea echoed by Roosevelt’s Suzanne Kahn in last year’s Investing in Care report.
Read more from Wilkins and her former colleagues: Six Biden Administration Officials on Reimagining a Progressive Future
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