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The Free Market Is Not Another Form of Rationing (Arguments for ObamaCare are wrong)
Pajamas Media ^ | 9/3/2009 | Paul Hsieh

Posted on 09/04/2009 8:06:58 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

As the health care debate rages, many conservatives have correctly argued that government-run “universal care” will lead to medical rationing. To control costs, the socialized health systems of Canada and Great Britain routinely restrict patients’ access to expensive services. A Canadian with a possible brain tumor might wait months for his government-approved MRI scan, whereas an American can receive one within days.

Liberals will typically counter that a free market is just “another form of rationing” — but by price rather than government decree. It is unjust, they say, that patients with money (or good insurance) can receive MRI scans whereas those without money cannot. Hence, they contend, the government must intervene to guarantee a supposedly fair distribution of medical services.

Too often, conservatives then concede this moral high ground to the liberals and defend the free market on purely economic grounds — e.g., a free market would lower costs for everyone. This is a serious mistake. Supporters of the free market should not allow opponents to characterize the marketplace as a form of rationing, let alone an unjust one. Instead, supporters should defend the free market as morally just because it respects individual rights.

To do so, one must properly define “rationing.” As the writer Ayn Rand noted:

“Rationing” has a specific meaning of its own. It means: to distribute in a certain particular manner — by the decision of an absolute authority, with the recipients having no choice whatever about what they receive; it also means that all the recipients involved have an equal claim to that which is being rationed, and are entitled to an equal share.

Examples include sugar rationing during World War II and gasoline rationing during the 1973 oil crisis, when the government dictated the terms and conditions of sugar or gasoline sales.

But in a free society, the government should not be regulating such sales at all. Producers — not the government — created the sugar (or gasoline) in the first place. Hence, they have the moral right to sell it to willing consumers on any mutually acceptable terms. There is no “just” distribution of sugar or gasoline apart from the voluntary exchanges between producers and consumers in a free market.

The same principle applies to health care. Health care does not magically grow on trees. Instead, it is a service that must be created by hard work and rational thought. The producers thus have the moral right to sell it to willing consumers on any mutually acceptable terms. There is no “just” distribution of medical services apart from the voluntary exchanges between producers and consumers in a free market.

Hence, if Bill makes more money than Joe and can purchase a $500 MRI scan that Joe can’t, then Bill deserves it. That’s not rationing, that’s justice — just as it’s not rationing if Bill can afford a house while Joe must live in an apartment, or if Bill can afford steak whereas Joe eats hamburgers.

In contrast, government programs that attempt to guarantee “universal health care” are unjust. There is no automatic “right” to goods or services that must be produced by another — that would be state-sanctioned theft or slavery.

Individuals are entitled to health care that they purchase themselves, is owed to them by contract (e.g., insurance), or is given to them as voluntary charity.

Whenever government attempts to guarantee an alleged “right” to health care, it must also control it. Bureaucrats and politicians must ultimately decide who gets what health care and when, not doctors and patients — if only to control costs. This is true rationing, and it necessarily violates the actual rights of the practitioners forced to provide care on the government’s terms (rather than their own) and the taxpayers forced to pay for it.

The free market is therefore the antithesis of rationing. It respects individual rights, whereas rationing unjustly violates individual rights — a crucial moral distinction.

If liberals are genuinely concerned about making health care more affordable, they should support free market reforms. Although the current American system is not a free market (but rather a mixed system), it is the least-regulated sectors of medicine — such as LASIK eye surgery — that follow the typical free-market pattern of falling prices and rising quality that we take for granted with computers and cell phones. This can and should be the norm in all of health care.

So when someone argues that a free market in health care would be just “another form of rationing,” challenge that claim. You won’t merely be debating semantics. You will be defending justice and individual rights. You will be helping to lower costs. And if someday you need an MRI scan in six days rather than six months, you may even be saving your own life.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: freemarket; healthcare; obamacare; rationing

1 posted on 09/04/2009 8:06:59 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Health care as a service from another is indead a rationed service. Either by price, or by putting on a schedule relating to how much time may be alloted to each applicant.

Your own personal health is TOTALLY a personal responsibility. Observe known methods of hygiene, prepare and consume healthy foods, and arrange your personal affairs to reduce stress to tolerable levels, while getting sufficent exercise to remain fit, both in mind and body.

This is not so much treatment of ills, as the practice of AVOIDANCE of malign factors. There are times when the approach of peril or calamity cannot be avoided, and this is why the health services delivery systems exist. People can, and have, lived all through a series of personal injury and sickness, and never even sought the services of a doctor or other medical practitioner. “The doctor never made it to the house, and of consequence, his health was much improved.” Recovery from injury or illness is as much a process of will and fortitude, as it is of actual treatment, as every physician, were he honest, would attest to.


2 posted on 09/04/2009 8:26:46 AM PDT by alloysteel (....the Kennedys can be regarded as dysfunctional. Even in death.)
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To: alloysteel

The problem with Obama and his ilk is that they have not grown beyond their own adolescence. Their conflict is with grownups who understand that our nation is the greatest in the world for some very specific reasons, free enterprise limited government, and strong religious faith chief among them.


3 posted on 09/04/2009 10:04:44 AM PDT by Louis Foxwell (Community activism is not an administrative skill.)
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To: SeekAndFind
The moral justification of capitalism lies in the fact that it is the only system consonant with man's rational nature, that it protects man's survival qua man, and that its ruling principle is: justice.

Ayn Rand

4 posted on 09/04/2009 10:18:58 AM PDT by mjp (pro-{God, reality, reason, egoism, individualism, independence, limited government, capitalism})
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To: SeekAndFind
“Rationing” has a specific meaning of its own. It means: to distribute in a certain particular manner — by the decision of an absolute authority, with the recipients having no choice whatever about what they receive; it also means that all the recipients involved have an equal claim to that which is being rationed, and are entitled to an equal share.

It's fun to define terms to one's liking.

5 posted on 09/04/2009 11:57:22 AM PDT by SoothingDave
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To: SeekAndFind
There is no “just” distribution of medical services apart from the voluntary exchanges between producers and consumers in a free market.

Every FReeper and lurker should repeat this sentence 1000, if necessary, to let this core principle of free market capitalism sink in.

Capitalism is nothing more nor less than economic liberty.

6 posted on 09/04/2009 12:03:45 PM PDT by TChris (There is no freedom without the possibility of failure.)
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To: socialismisinsidious


Socialized Medicine aka Universal Health Care daily digest PING LIST

FReepmail me if you want to be added to or removed from this daily digest ping list.




7 posted on 09/04/2009 8:17:07 PM PDT by socialismisinsidious ( The socialist income tax system turns US citizens into beggars or quitters!)
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