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Yes. If you have total control over the availability and price of a particular product or service, you have a monopoly on it. Again, I don't think drug patents are bad. But there's a serious problem when a bottle of pills that costs $80 here can be had for $5 in South America.
Now you're going into the realm of generics which is essentially what I do.
The original drug is always more expensive because it has the attached research. Lets take aspirin for example, the first company who made it might have spent 500mil on research. The first company to make a generic once it comes off the patent would have spent 100k on registration.
As much as companies want to tell you generics are exactly the same as the original, they are not.
All meds have 2 parts, actives and excipients. Actives are the bits which actually do something in your body, excipients are the bits that dont but is needed to hold the tablet together, colouring, or part of the delivery system. While actives are public knowledge, excipients are not, and thus generics are forced to come up with their own through research and development. Most of the time this is not as good as the original. (remember i'm talking about the first generics, this process does get more refined as time goes by, but the first wave of generics is about timing and not always quality).
Now if you're talking about the same brand, under patent, selling for different prices. I'd say it's either off the back of a truck, or an imitation. I don't know of any company who would do that to their own bottom line.