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The sector will not be crippled but marginal companies, startups, and even established OEMs will face demand pressures.
October 10, 2025
By: Tony Freeman
President, A.S. Freeman Advisors LLC
Medtech is generally viewed as a global marketplace, thanks to the growth of medical care in developing countries. Yet there is a significant variance in device prices between countries. The world’s most lucrative market for OEMs most definitely is the United States. Not only does the United States consume an exceptional number of medical devices in relation to its population, OEMs can charge more per unit due to the complex and unique American healthcare reimbursement system. Recent funding cuts to federal healthcare programs will have both short-term and longer, permanent effects on medtech’s most valuable market.
Many of us dread making small talk at cocktail parties and outdoor barbecues. An effective way of driving off more socially accomplished neighbors is to start a conversation about the U.S. healthcare system’s funding structure. Unlike other developed countries with single payer approaches, the United States uses a patchwork of public and private funding methods to cover $5.3 trillion in annual spending on all forms of healthcare. Many Americans believe that private insurance policies provided through employers and out-of-pocket payments by patients are the largest slice of the funding pie. This observation is correct but misleading. Through a variety of programs, the federal government covers more than 40% of Americans’ healthcare costs.
Four programs constitute $2.1 trillion in annual spending. They are:
There are other federal healthcare funding initiatives but these programs comprise the bulk of U.S. government-provided medical coverage for citizens. Add state-funded programs and almost 55% of U.S. healthcare is paid by Uncle Sam.
Recent actions by the Trump Administration and U.S. Congress have reduced the government’s commitment to funding healthcare. The “Big, Beautiful Bill” signed by the President in July will phase in cuts to Medicaid, Medicare, and ACA over the next five years, extracting $1 trillion in healthcare spending. Consequently, an estimated 11 million Americans (or about 3% of the country) will lose their health insurance. Others will see restricted coverage or reduced payments, and likely have to finance the shortfall themselves.
Do these cuts matter to the medtech industry? On the surface the numbers are modest. This year, medtech is a $625 billion industry. The U.S. comprises 4% of the world’s population, so in half a decade the impact will be around $25 billion. Noticeable, but not overwhelming, right? Wrong. Despite representing 4% of the globe’s inhabitants, the United States represents 37% of healthcare spending. How is this possible?
Numerous factors drive the overconsumption of medtech in America. The first is the philosophy behind U.S. healthcare. While it is designed to maintain high quality standards—as with all developed nations—the U.S. also prioritized healthcare’s accessibility. Compared to single-payer nations where non-essential care is often rationed (think three weeks for a non-emergency MRI in Canada) the United States prides itself on a free enterprise system that makes state-of-the-art technology and services available to most consumers with little delay. Not surprisingly, this exceptional infrastructure of facilities and providers costs lots of money. The second, and more pressing, issue is the United States overpays for medtech compared with the rest of the world because the government is largely prohibited from bargaining for medical devices.
In almost every other country, the main customer for medical devices is not the patient, doctor, or hospital but rather, a national health service. These government-run organizations negotiate with medtech companies to obtain the best price they can in exchange for a guaranteed number of purchases. The United States has, until recently, been legally restricted from bargaining. Its role has been to pay for devices approved by doctors, hospitals, and insurance companies within certain reimbursement guidelines. Despite boasting massive pricing power in representing more than 100 million potential patients, the U.S. government has largely been merely a check-writer. In the last three years progress has been made to permit Medicare to negotiate for pharmaceuticals and devices but it is not expected to become a widespread practice in the near future.
Since the United States is the biggest, richest market for medtech, there will certainly be serious implications to the government’s healthcare spending cuts. Three in particular stand out, all deleterious to the medtech industry:
Although the decline of reimbursements through federal funding may lead to some rationalization of an arguably over-rich American medical system, the impact on the medtech industry will be series of drags that results in products with thinner profit margins and lower manufacturing runs. The sector will not be crippled but marginal companies, startups, and even established OEMs will face demand pressures. Many of these pressures will be triggered by the U.S. government becoming less willing to fund product development for the rest of the world.
Tony Freeman is the president of A.S. Freeman Advisors, a firm concentrated on the merger and acquisition and valuation consulting needs of the medical supply chain as well as other precision industries. Freeman can be reached at tfreeman@asfreeman.com.
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