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Should Product-Specific Advertisement be Regulated in Pharmaceutical Markets?

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  • Junichiro Ishida
  • Tsuyoshi Takahara

Abstract

This paper examines the optimal content regulation of DTCA by comparing two forms of DTCA---product-specific and category-specific---and identifies a key tradeoff which underlies this policy debate. Our analysis suggests that the optimal form of DTCA depends crucially on the cost effectiveness of DTCA and the market-size distortion induced by DTCA. When the cost of advertisement is high, there often exists a Pareto-improving policy choice: category-specific DTCA is preferred when the market-size distortion is more severe while produce DTCA is preferred when it is less so. As the cost decreases, however, a conflict emerges between pharmaceutical firms and patients: firms are worse off under product-specific DTCA while patients are better off. We also find that the physician's reluctance to persuade misinformed patients can actually alleviate the market-size distortion and hence be welfare-enhancing.

Suggested Citation

  • Junichiro Ishida & Tsuyoshi Takahara, 2022. "Should Product-Specific Advertisement be Regulated in Pharmaceutical Markets?," ISER Discussion Paper 1182, Institute of Social and Economic Research, Osaka University.
  • Handle: RePEc:dpr:wpaper:1182
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