
QUT Professor Endorses UK Push To Create Smokefree Generations
QUT Media4th November 2025 The United Kingdom Parliament is considering a bill aimed at making smoking obsolete, which has been
Dana Brown
Director, Next System Project
Research Paper published by the Democracty Collaborative
Full paper: https://thenextsystem.org/medicineforall
Executive Summary:
Too many Americans are suffering and dying prematurely because we have ceded control over a key part of our infrastructure for public health—the pharmaceutical industry—to unaccountable corporations, for whom the pursuit of profit trumps the needs of patients and communities. Instead of continuing to push the boulder of regulation up the hill in hopes that it one day finally proves effective, we can displace corporate power over our health and lives by moving towards a democratic, publicly-owned pharmaceutical sector, designed to respond to public health needs and deliver better health outcomes at lower costs.
Democratic, public ownership of pharmaceutical development, production, and distribution in the U.S. is necessary to combat the increasingly harmful impacts of Big Pharma which decades of regulation have failed to counteract. These impacts are:
Developing a public pharmaceutical sector presents a systemic approach to these issues, superseding the need for piecemeal reform which could be rolled back in the future. We see this new public pharmaceutical sector as a resilient ecosystem, with publicly-owned companies across the supply chain set up at local, state, regional and national levels. Moreover, public pharmaceuticals would produce improved outcomes for our health, economy and democracy even in the absence of other interventions such as patent reform, anti-trust action, or changes to our health insurance system.
Public control of pharmaceutical manufacturing, wholesale distribution and retail pharmacies could serve as the basis for large-scale upstream investments in public health3 through the development of associated educational opportunities and job pipelines—part of an inclusive industrial strategy for economic development and stabilization, with profit now captured by corporations reinvested to meet public needs. Existing public resources like the Veterans Health Administration and the US Postal Service could be leveraged to help deliver medications, and public, unitary pricing on medications and their distribution would create transparency in the pharmaceutical supply chain that could inform further policy efforts.
Public ownership in pharmaceutical R&D would ensure that more intellectual property related to drug development would be held by public institutions and utilized in the public interest. Right now, a small number of newer medications are responsible for the majority of pharmaceutical spending by public programs like Medicare and Medicaid. Ensuring that new drug development is done in the public interest assures that not only do we get the medications that we need for the most pressing public health concerns (rather than the most profitable health issues), but also that those medications come at an accessible price.
Public production of generic medications alone could have great benefits for public health, as well as economic benefits for patients and insurers alike. Currently there are around 180 off-patent drugs with no generic equivalent on the market.4 There are a further 500+ drugs with only one generic on market5, and as the FDA has found, when there’s only one generic, it is usually priced just below the brand name drug. It is not until the second generic is introduced that prices drop precipitously.6
Coupled with the issue of recurring shortages, a clear role for public pharmaceuticals would be to assure the adequate supply of generics, especially for essential medicines—many of which are currently in short supply in the United States. However, we maintain that truly ensuring the affordable medicine a healthy America needs requires looking beyond generics to a fully public pharmaceutical sector running from the R&D lab all the way to the end user in the hospital room or pharmacy.
Pharmaceutical spending is now the fastest growing portion of a healthcare sector that is already approaching a fifth of the US economy—while life expectancy declines. No reform currently under serious consideration would challenge the underlying profit-driven structure of the industry which allows it to function outside democratic, public control and contrary to vital public needs.
Publicly-owned pharmaceuticals, free of the structural need to appease profit-hungry shareholders, would be able to focus first and foremost on public health priorities, working hand in hand with public health departments (as they do in other countries) to assure an adequate supply of medications priced to be accessible to the broadest array of Americans. Countries including Sweden, Brazil, Cuba, and China have successful public pharmaceutical industries from which we can learn. Furthermore, Americans from across the political spectrum already support the idea of public production of essential medications.7
With mounting public pressure to take action against Big Pharma and control drug prices, now is the time for bold long-term solutions that can help secure the future health and wellbeing of our communities. Public pharmaceuticals can play an important role in constructing that future we so desperately need.
Full paper: https://thenextsystem.org/medicineforall

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