Minister for AI and Online Safety (): I am repeating the
following Written Ministerial Statement made today in the other
place by my Noble Friend, the Minister of State for Science,
Innovation, Research and Nuclear, of Balham.
Today I can update the House that the UK and US governments have
published the joint text of our Arrangement on
Pharmaceuticals Pricing and Tariffs. This builds on the
General Terms for the UK-US Economic Prosperity Deal announced in
May 2025 and takes forward joint commitments made when the
principles of the partnership were first announced in December
2025. The Arrangement will improve the lives of NHS patients,
support our life sciences sector, and grow the economy.
Central to the partnership are the actions the Government
is taking to improve and protect UK patient access to new and
important medicines. More NHS patients will get improved
access to life-changing new treatments because of the medicines
pricing changes we have made, and the associated UK medicines
spend targets set out in the Arrangement. Investing in medicines
helps keep people healthier for longer, reduces pressure on the
health service over the longer-term, and ensures we have an NHS
that is fit for the future.
The update to the NICE cost effectiveness threshold, made for the
first time in two decades, has already made a direct difference
for NHS patients. Two medicines have already been recommended by
NICE under the new threshold, giving patients immediate accessing
to life-changing medicines - including a brain cancer drug for
patients as young as 12 and a last-resort treatment for patients
with a rare form of stomach cancer who had already exhausted
other options. NHS patients in England will be able to access
these through the health service, thanks to the new thresholds.
In addition, the Arrangement includes clarification of the US
commitments on its Most Favoured Nation (MFN) pricing policy and
support for UK patient access; including outlining expectations
from the US Government that companies will continue to launch new
medicines quickly in the UK.
The partnership supports our life sciences sector – which
not only saves lives but creates jobs, drives investment, and
powers innovation across our economy. UK pharmaceuticals
exports to the US – worth over £5 billion in 2024 - will be
subject to no additional US tariffs as a result of Section 232 or
Section 301 investigations for at least 3 years. This includes
avoiding Section 232 tariffs on patented pharmaceuticals of up to
100% announced by the US on Thursday 2 April. This makes the UK
the first and only country to benefit from a commitment to tariff
free access to the US pharmaceuticals market, providing certainty
for UK exporters, and giving the UK sector a significant
competitive advantage over other trading partners. This supports
economic growth and helps protect our vital pharmaceutical
manufacturing industry - which in 2025 added £28.5bn to the UK
economy, employed over 50,000 people in high-skilled jobs across
the country, and exported almost £21bn in pharmaceutical products
worldwide.
We have also achieved preferential terms for medical technology
exports, which will be subject to no additional tariffs as a
result of Section 232 or Section 301 investigations for at least
three years – protecting over 195,000 UK jobs in the MedTech
sector. The UK and US have also agreed to work together towards
mutual recognition of medical device approvals - cutting red tape
and supporting future innovative health technologies to reach
patients on both sides of the Atlantic.
The partnership has received widespread support from the life
sciences sector, and will lead to greater investment in UK life
sciences. It has already started generating results, such as £500
million investment in UK R&D and manufacturing in Surrey from
the global biopharmaceutical company UCB which was announced in
January.
We will continue to work closely with the life sciences sector to
help land investment into the UK, and deliver on our ambition for
the UK to become the third most important life sciences economy
by 2035 - as set out in our Life Sciences Sector Plan.
The finalising of this Arrangement does not introduce any further
costs for HM Government beyond those set out previously. The
Government will continue to assess the costs and benefits of this
arrangement.