ornerynorsk said:
It’s not that the healthcare system is broken, the US still has the finest in the world
Ummm...
is it?
beej67, applying this same logic to other countries such as Sweden or the UK, it would seem that they too would suffer from a “lack of an individual’s motivation to keep their own costs down and the systems motivation to do everything to drive costs up”. Being publically funded (socialized), they should be even worse than the US. However, this is opposite from reality. The (2011) health expenditure cost per capita of both Sweden ($3,925) and the UK ($3,405) is less than half that of the US ($8,508). Furthermore, the socialized systems of the UK and Sweden should, according to this logic, be bogged down to bureaucratic inefficiencies. However, they ranked first and second in “efficiency”, while the US was dead last amongst other Western nations.
The free market is not the panacea of the health care system, quite the opposite. The free market is great at commodifying and profiting off things. Sometimes, it has the co-benefit of improving society but this is not it’s goal. If there is a conflict between profits and what’s in the best interest of society, profits win (actually, they LEGALLY must win due to Dodge v. Ford). This is fundamentally problematic for something such as healthcare which, as moltenmetal stated, is closer to a basic human right than a commodity.
The failure to recognize this by free market enthusiasts largely stems from a bizarre and contradictory notion that when good things happen, it was the free market working the way it should and when bad things happen, it was regulations preventing the free market from operating efficiently.
1) The free market is the most flexible, adaptable, responsive system ever contrived. It is the solution to all social and economic issues, under every possible situation. (i.e. free market during boom periods)
2) Regulations, regardless of their extent or rigidity, completely undermine the free market and destroy its ability to operate effectively. The free market is completely inept at being able to adjust to any and all regulations imposed upon it. (i.e. free market during bust periods)
1) Without the competition that the free market offers, companies will greedily raise prices and lazily let quality slide. Consumers, being mindless drones, won’t respond. A 1984-esque society will emerge. (i.e. socialized healthcare…despite all real world evidence)
2) Without the regulations and corporate laws, companies will act in the best interest of the consumer and society at large. Consumers, being citizens of change, will effectively boycott, in mass, those companies that don’t. An egalitarian society will prosper. (i.e. free market healthcare…despite all real world evidence)
1) The free market works efficiently because consumers respond strongly to price points and thus puts pressure on companies to improve efficiency and drive down costs. (i.e. why Walmart does so well)
2) The free market works ethically because consumers don’t respond strongly to price points and thus will encourage companies to act ethically and in the best interest of society even if that means increasing prices to do so. (i.e. why Walmart does so poorly…wait…)
Given this contradictory stance, it’s no wonder that some will continue to believe that the US health care system needs more free market solutions, not less, despite all the evidence supporting the opposite.
I’m getting déjà vu from this discussion…one side using belief that the free market will solve all life’s problems (and, conversely, regulations cause all of life’s problems) and the other side using real world evidence to counter this stance…sounds oddly familiar…