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Mark Cuban Corrects Elizabeth Warren As She Slams JNJ, PFE For Higher Prices And Zero Taxes On Big Pharma: 'PBMs Corrupt Healthcare'

Rishabh Mishra

3 min read

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A heated debate over the U.S. healthcare system erupted on X, pitting billionaire entrepreneur Mark Cuban against Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass) over the root causes of soaring drug prices.

What Happened: The clash, unfolding as of Friday, has reignited discussions on Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs) and Big Pharma's tax practices, with the Senate poised to address reform amid rising public scrutiny.

Enter Cuban, the Dallas Mavericks owner and founder of Cost Plus Drugs, who fired back with a pointed correction.

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In a post quoting Warren, Cuban argued that PBMs—not Big Pharma—are the true culprits behind inflated drug prices.

“PBMs corrupt healthcare,” he wrote, explaining that these intermediaries control formularies and manipulate prices to maximize rebate revenue, with three major PBMs negotiating over 90% of rebates for commercial insurance plans.

Warren, in her post, had blamed pharmaceutical giants like Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ) and Pfizer Inc. (NYSE:PFE) for charging Americans the “highest drug prices in the world” while paying “zero dollars in federal taxes.”

Citing data from her Senate Finance Committee role, Warren highlighted how these companies, alongside AbbVie Inc. (NYSE:ABBV), Amgen Inc. (NASDAQ:AMGN), and Merck & Co Inc. (NYSE:MRK), have exploited tax loopholes from the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act to shield billions in profits.

“Republicans want to make it worse. I’m fighting back,” she declared, sharing a CNBC headline and urging action against what she calls a “rigged tax system.”

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Why It Matters: Cuban has been a critic of the healthcare system, saying that it should be simple. According to him, it’s become overly complicated by big insurance companies and PBMs.