KEY POINTS
  • Medicare is gaining the power to negotiate prices for certain drugs and punish pharmaceutical companies that don't play by the rules.
  • The legislation represents a historic expansion of Medicare's power that was fiercely opposed by the pharmaceutical industry.
  • But the negotiation powers are limited in scope, and some lawmakers argue that legislation doesn't go far enough.
A pharmacist collects medications for prescriptions at a pharmacy.

Medicare is poised to renegotiate the prices of some of its most expensive drugs through a historic expansion of its power, which could reduce costs for many seniors as well as federal spending on its prescription drug plan.

The changes are tucked inside a massive spending-and-tax bill in Congress that includes $433 billion in investments in health-care and clean energy. House Democrats passed the Inflation Reduction Act on Friday in a 220 to 207 vote along party lines, ending a tortured legislative process that took more than a year.