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For the third session, we focused on innovative pricing methods in the areas of healthcare, social policy and climate change.
The Value in public finance peer learning group provides a platform for those in government, academia, private and other sectors to discuss and explore ways to improve value creation of public expenditure. This peer learning group aims to create a community of individuals and organisations interested in improving public finance and how economies perform. We are an inclusive group of thinkers and practitioners and would welcome international engagement on the above themes as well as any others.
The group meets every 2 months for an hour-long discussion and is co-organised by the GO Lab and Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy (CIPFA). Jeffrey Matsu and Dr Mehdi Shiva co-lead the sessions.
Can social value be monetised? Defining the ‘value’ of a public policy has been notoriously challenging, but there have been some recent advances made in two very different domains - healthcare (e.g., value-based pricing) and climate / carbon (e.g., carbon pricing). CIPFA-GO Lab’s Value in Public Finance PLG invited our audience to join the conversation as we considered innovative pricing methods, their transferability and what this all meant for pricing social outcomes.
We welcomed experts from organisations such as the World Bank, HM Treasury, and Global Pricing Innovations to explore pricing practices.
We began the session by exploring pricing mechanisms for medicines and healthcare treatments. Along with the rise of advanced technologies in healthcare, research and development (R&D) costs for manufacturers have increased significantly. While these new treatments may bring benefits to population health and may offer long-term fiscal savings for the healthcare system, there are challenges around short-term affordability. These budget constraints and uncertainty have led to advances in pricing methods that enable closer alignment to value.
▪ Value-based Pricing: While there remains high variability in how medicines are priced and regulated across countries, value-based pricing can be understood as linking a price to value based on a range of quantitative criteria including clinical benefits and cost- effectiveness. Health Technology Assessment (HTA) agencies are responsible for evaluating the evidence and determining a threshold for payment and reimbursement. Where there is an emphasis on cost-effectiveness, a relative improvement in lifespan and quality of life measured by Quality-Adjusted Life Years (QALYs) is used to determine a threshold for determining cost-effectiveness.
▪ Innovative Payment Schemes: When there is insufficient evidence to assess clinical and economic effectiveness, payers and manufacturers have negotiated innovative risk- sharing agreements to pay for new and promising treatments and provide patients with expedited access. These arrangements can range from finance-based (e.g., discounts and caps) or value-based (e.g., outcomes-based agreements linking payment to achieved health outcomes), with may schemes combining a mix of the two. However, there has been a rise in value-based agreements, reflecting the technological advancements in data collection and management.
We then explored climate change mitigation policies, another domain in which there have been notable advances in pricing mechanisms. We discussed the use of carbon pricing in incentivising changes in the ways businesses invest and produce goods as well as how consumers adapt their behaviours in response to relative changes in price.
▪ Carbon Pricing: By placing value on negative impact caused by greenhouse gas emissions, carbon pricing creates incentives for changes in investment, production, and consumption. While it is not a panacea for climate change mitigation, it can be a cost- effective tool as a part of policy suite and has a potential to offer a multitude of benefits ranging from health to economic outcomes. 3 main instruments of direct carbon pricing (i.e., direct link between the price and emissions) are: 1) Carbon Tax (explicit price on emissions); 2) Emissions Trading Scheme (placing a limit on emissions and enabling the price to be determined by market dynamics of scarcity of allowances); and 3) Carbon Crediting Mechanism (voluntary mechanisms that values emission reduction). Suitability of each instrument depends on each jurisdiction’s readiness of tax frameworks, maturity of market and capacity.
▪ Current State of Carbon Pricing and its Challenges: There is a global momentum to adapt carbon pricing to mitigate climate change. However, the vast majority of carbon price is currently below the recommended USD 40-80 corridors in practice. Many challenges remain in communicating these reforms effectively, managing and addressing distributional impacts, and navigating implementation in regulated markets and asymmetrical ambition across the globe.
During the second part of the session, 3 experts provided their practitioner perspectives on outcomes pricing. We reflected on learnings in healthcare and climate policy and how they might be applied to other social policy domains (e.g., homelessness and employment support).
We first explored pricing practices for social outcomes from a perspective of stakeholders in outcomes-based contracts.
Taking inspiration from carbon pricing and its use of market mechanisms, we then explored an innovative platform that creates a local marketplace for social impact (Rikx, currently piloted in Rotterdam, the Netherlands).
Finally, we explored how multiple dimensions of value are captured in official guidance to inform decision-making in practice.