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Not So Fast!

Are Medical Markets an Inherent Failure?

By William Anderson
Published: 5 August 2009
Are Medical Markets an Inherent Failure?

Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman recently made an extraordinary statement regarding the application of markets to medical care.  Writing in his July 31 column, Krugman stated:

Right-wing opponents of reform would have you believe that President Obama is a wild-eyed socialist, attacking the free market. But unregulated markets don’t work for health care — never have, never will. To the extent we have a working health care system at all right now it’s only because the government covers the elderly, while a combination of regulation and tax subsidies makes it possible for many, but not all, nonelderly Americans to get decent private coverage.  (Emphasis mine)

Now, I hardly would be surprised to read such a comment from a politician or political science professor, but when a supposedly-august economist makes this claim, I believe the statement needs to be further analyzed before we can utter the phrase, “Not so fast.”

In doing this, however, we have to define our terms.  First, we have to define what an “unregulated market” is, and second, we then have to define the term “work” as he applies it.

Now, when Krugman refers to an “unregulated market,” he is describing a “market” in which the government does not set the terms of exchange, the prices, and govern the output.  In his view (expressed elsewhere) an “unregulated” market is chaotic, full of gaps, and generally operates out of control.  For example, he has described the turmoil on Wall Street as being the result of “unregulated markets” in finance.

I don’t know what academic world Krugman inhabits, but I would say that there is no such thing as an “unregulated” market.  Even a market in which government plays no role absolutely is going to be regulated by the Law of Scarcity and by profits and losses.  Indeed, markets exist precisely because of scarcity; non-scarce goods (like the air I am breathing right now) do not have to be allocated because my use does not deprive anyone else of using this good.  I give up nothing to breathe this air, and neither does anyone else in my house.

If a good is scarce, however, it not only must be produced, but also distributed, and markets are those entities that govern the process of production and exchange.  The only goods that can avoid some kind of market process are precisely those that are non-scarce, and no one, not even Krugman, is claiming that medical care is a perfectly free and abundant good.

However, that clearly is not true.  Krugman is saying that the medical markets cannot function unless government is directing the production and exchange.  What he means is that the medical market is different than the market for, say, cars or CDs.  From what I can decipher from his and other claims to support “universal” medical care, a “market failure” occurs when someone is not able to access immediately all of the medical care he or she “needs” immediately.

Now, if this is what he means by a “market failure,” then every market (including the distribution of government-produced goods) falls into that category.  If I cannot afford a Rolls-Royce, is that due to “market failure”?  Lest one think I am exaggerating, read on:

…government involvement is the only reason our system works at all.

The key thing you need to know about health care is that it depends crucially on insurance.

This is a non sequitur. There is nothing inherent about medical care that requires insurance or any other third-party payment for ordinary treatment.  In fact, health insurance first came about as a mechanism to deal with paying for catastrophic events, not routine care.  Government involvement in medical care, and especially the advent of Medicare with its third-party payments for nearly all medical care hastened the invasion of the modern mess.

From an economic point of view, a scarce good is a scarce good, whether it is medical care or sirloin steak.  The problem is that government has piled intervention on top of intervention, and driving up the costs and making care less available in the process.  The “failure” of the present system is a government failure, period.

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  1. [...] 5, 2009 · Leave a Comment The following has been republished with permission from the Foundation for Economic Education’s “Not So [...]

  2. [...] This medical News / Journal title : :Are Medical Markets an Inherent Failure? | Foundation for Economic …From an economic point of view, a scarce good is a scarce good, whether it is medical care or sirloin steak. The problem is that government has piled intervention on top of intervention, and driving up the costs and making care less …Read Full about this medical News / resources [...]

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  5. Imagine if anyone who wishes to blog about the economy must be certified by a College of Economist, and anyone who wishes to participate in the economy conduct them through a certified practitioner.

    Next, imagine artificial scarcity created by the College in order to raise incomes. Raising the incomes increases the value of the “meal ticket”, and entitles the College to raise training fees, erect higher barriers of entry, fund powerful lobby groups to entrench their position.

    This, professor, is the state of the medical industry today.

    You are quite right that there is no free markets, owing to layers and layers of government intervention.

    However, most of these interventions are a result of asymmetry of information: i.e. patients may be able to judge whether a doctor is nice, but not whether a doctor is effective or safe. The cosmetics industry is an example of what a wild-west of medicine may have looked like.

    We need to accept that medicine is one of the roles that government play in our daily lives, but also accept that when it fails to work, the rules of the game needs to be further adjusted to account for the effect of applying the rules in the first place. This has to be done iteratively. Over in Australia, where public health insurance operates, the government is now contemplating an increase in charges to account for budgetary blowouts. This is in itself not bad, because it has managed to hold medical cost (% GDP) at an internationally competitive level.

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