Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy
Volume 1, Issue 1 , Pages 118-125, March 2005

Accounting principles, revenue recognition, and the profitability of pharmacy benefit managers

Department of Pharmacy Sciences, Creighton University, Omaha, NE 68178, USA

Abstract 

Objectives

To contrast pharmacy benefit management (PBM) companies' measured profitability by using two accounting standards. The first accounting standard is that which, under Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), PBMs are currently allowed to employ. The second accounting standard, seemingly more congruent with the PBM business model, treats the PBM as an agent of the plan sponsor.

Data Sources

Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) Emerging Issues Task Force Issue 99-19, U.S. Securities and Exchange 10-K filings and financial accounting literature.

Summary

Under GAAP record keeping, the PBM industry profitability appears modest. Using currently applied GAAP, the PBM treats all payment from the plan sponsor as revenue and all payment to the pharmacy as revenue. However, the PBM functions, in practice, as an entity that passes-through money collected from one party (the sponsor) to other parties (dispensing pharmacies). Therefore, it would seem that the nature of PBM cash flows would be more accurately recorded as a pass-through entity. When the PBM is evaluated using an accounting method that recognizes the pass-through nature of its business, the PBM profit margin increases dramatically.

Conclusion

Current GAAP standards make traditional financial statement analysis of PBMs unrevealing, and may hide genuinely outstanding financial performance. Investors, regulators, pharmacies, and the FASB all have an interest in moving to clarify this accounting anomaly.

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PII: S1551-7411(04)00007-5

doi:10.1016/j.sapharm.2004.12.006

Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy
Volume 1, Issue 1 , Pages 118-125, March 2005