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Stiffed: Why Are Bailed-Out Banks Helping Pfizer Buy Wyeth?
Are U.S. taxpayers getting stiffed? Pfizer, Viagra's daddy, is using money from taxpayer-bailed-out banks to help buy major pharmaceutical competitor Wyeth in a $68 billion deal. That won't help taxpayers or consumers. Nor is it designed to. It will harm the companies' workers, 20,000 of whom will likely be laid off. It's even likely to hurt small bio-tech companies, drying up potential sources of capital and leaving fewer potential major investors or purchasers.
The deal may be good for Pfizer, helping the company recover from a $2.3 billion legal settlement over misleading marketing on the pain reliever Bextra, and helping them amplify the clout of the $3 million they recently spent lobbying against the right to import cheaper drugs from Canada. But it won't help the rest of us.
So why are banks bailed out with taxpayer dollars furnishing the $22.5 billion of debt financing for this deal? On NPR, a financial analyst crowed about how wonderful it was that major banks were lending this kind of money in the current economy. But it troubles me that among the deal's prime financial backers--Bank of America/Merrill Lynch, Barclays, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs and J.P. Morgan/Chase--all but the British-owned Barclays received money from the Congressional bailout. So the funds they lent to this merger won't be available to help smaller (or larger) companies keep their doors open producing and selling products--ideally ones that actually benefit society--and not just to consolidate control over their industry. This seems one more case of public subsidies for private gain.
I'm no economist. For all I know, maybe in some Henry Paulson-Alan Greenspan dream world this will end up boosting America's physical and fiscal health. Perhaps the new combined entity will come up with some miracle drug that neither company would have created on their own. But mostly, it seems just one more example of how a bailout without strong government control, or even oversight, just feeds the same greed-driven abuses that have gotten us into our current predicament. It's going to take more than Viagra to strengthen our economy once more.



5 Comments so far
Show All"This seems one more case of public subsidies for private gain."
Yes, I suspect it is!
Both companies are facing critical money-making drug patent expirations. Once the patents expire, generics will be produced by competitors who will sell them at discounted prices around the globe.
If Pfizer or Wyeth haven't been able to discover other chic drugs they can push onto millions of people, investors will put their money elsewhere.
Quick - merge them so the new company becomes too big to be allowed to fail! Praise the Lord and pass the legislation.
What's next? Using the bailout money to protect big Pharma from medicinal marijuana?
The folks who received their bailouts are already misusing those funds to kill EFCA. Check it out.
http://www.alternet.org/blogs/peek/123105/revealed%3A_bailed-out_execs_plotting_against_efca/
As for mm, well Obama is already folding like a tent thanks to this:
http://www.alternet.org/drugreporter/123133/marijuana_reform_is_part_of_the_progressive_agenda%2C_so_why_are_obama%27s_drug_cops_already_making_pot_raids/
Thanks for the links. Those bailout bumbs even had a conference call on how they should go about undermining labor unions. Every day there's always something outrageous that these banksters come up with.