Esteban du Plantier said:
ABATTBQ11 said:
Esteban du Plantier said:
EMY92 said:
hedge said:
Quit eating sugar and bread
Fasting, my BG will go up 30 to 50 points per hour without any active insulin. No insulin and I'm dead in less than a week, even with no food.
If type 2 people controlled their blood sugar with diet, then overall demand would decrease and free up more for type 1, reducing cost for you.
You think insulin supply is low?
ETA Seriously, am I the only one who sees the absolute absurdity in this statement?
Price is a function of supply and demand.
If demand reduces, price will drop irrespective of supply.
First, let's ask ourselves, as we always should when using any model, "
What are the assumptions here?" First and foremost for the supply/demand model is
competitive markets. Another is that price elasticity for demand is less than 0. Both of these are violated by the market for insulin.
The main reason insulin is expensive is there is very limited market competition. There are only 3 US manufacturers, and no generics. Those three manufacturers tweak their insulin formulations or manufacturing process every so often to extend their patents, but there have been no significant changes in decades. There are also patents on inactive ingredients and delivery systems that further discourage generics. It is really a story about patent walls and regulatory hurdles keeping out competition. With how manufacturers negotiate with pharmacy benefit managers and insurers, diabetics of all types typically only have a single realistic option for insulin. Thus, the market is oligopolistic at best and monopolistic at worst.
Also, as stated by others, insulin is an absolute necessity for T1 diabetics. They have to pay whatever it costs or die, so demand from them is inelastic. Demand does not decrease with price increases. If T2 went away tomorrow, prices for T1 diabetics likely wouldn't change at all, and if anything would probably increase to offset the lost profit and revenue from T2's. After all, T1's don't have a choice.
Since some of the core assumptions of the classical supply/demand model are so egregiously violated,
it doesn't really apply. T2's controlling their blood sugar through diet wouldn't free up anything for T1's and wouldn't lower costs for them.