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The Market Doesn’t Ration Health Care

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Published: 7 August 2009
The Market Doesn’t Ration Health Care

Healthcare reformers say they have two objectives: to enable the uninsured and under-insured to consume more medical services than they consume now, and to keep the prices of those services from rising, as they have been, faster than the prices of other goods and services. Unfortunately, Economics 101 tells us that to accomplish those two things directly — increased consumption by one group and lower prices — the government would have to take a third step: rationing. The reformers are disingenuous about this last step, and for good reason. People don’t like rationing, especially of medical care.

But some defenders of government control acknowledge that rationing is the logical consequence of their ambition. They parry objections by saying in effect: “So we’ll have to ration. Big deal. We already have rationing — by the market.”

For example, Uwe Reinhardt, an economics professor and advocate of government-controlled medicine, writes, “In short, free markets are not an alternative to rationing. They are just one particular form of rationing. Ever since the Fall from Grace, human beings have had to ration everything not available in unlimited quantities, and market forces do most of the rationing.”

Sadly, interventionist economists are not the only economists who talk this way. Most free-market economists would agree that where there is scarcity there must be rationing and that the most efficient way to ration is by price, that is, through the market.

This is factually wrong and strategically ill-advised. As we’ll see, markets do not ration. Thus the healthcare debate is not about which method of rationing — State or market — is superior.

Let me be clear about what I am not denying. I am not denying that economic goods are by definition scarce and that at any given time we must settle for less of them than we want. I am also not denying that the marketplace is relevant in determining who gets how much of those scarce goods.

I am denying that this is appropriately called “rationing.”

Markets Don’t Do Anything

To see that the market does not ration one need only see that “the market” doesn’t do anything. To talk as if it does things is to reify the market — worse, it is to anthropomorphize the market, ascribing to it attributes — purposes, plans, and actions — that only human beings possess. We may also see this as another instance of literalizing a metaphor, which, as Thomas Szasz has so often warned, is fraught with peril.

I’m not saying that economists don’t realize this diction is a metaphor. Of course they do, and there’s no harm in using this shorthand among those who understand it as such. The problem, as I see it, is that the general public doesn’t fully grasp the metaphorical nature of these statements. For the sake of public understanding, free-market advocates should not welcome a debate in which they begin by saying, “Our method of rationing is better than your method of rationing.”

Better to respond to the interventionists this way: The market does not ration or allocate. The market does not do anything. It has no purposes or objectives. It is simply a legal framework in which people do things with their justly acquired property and their time in order to pursue their own purposes.

This is squarely in the Austrian conception of the market as set out by Ludwig von Mises and F. A. Hayek. The market order “has no specific purposes but will enhance for all the prospects of achieving their respective purposes,” Hayek wrote in volume two of Law Legislation, and Liberty.

The market was never set up by people to achieve a purpose. It is not a device or an invention aimed at satisfying an intention. “Market mechanism” is a metaphor. The market — as a set of continuing relations among people — emerged, unplanned and unintended, from exchanges, initially barter, in which the parties intended only to improve their respective situations. Lecturing at FEE this week, Israel Kirzner recalled that one of the first things Mises said to him as a graduate student was, “The market is a process,” by which he meant “a series of activities.” This is similar to what the French liberal economist Destutt de Tracy (1754–1836) wrote in A Treatise on Political Economy, “Society is purely and solely a continual series of exchanges.”

Mises, Hayek, and Tracy help us to sort out the rationing question. I submit it makes no sense to say that an undesigned series of exchanges rations goods. If we were to observe a free market (wouldn’t that be nice?), what would we see? Rationing? Allocation? Of course not. We would see people exchanging things — factors of production, services, and consumer goods — for money. Where would they have gotten those things? From previous exchanges or original appropriation from nature.

When a person buys five apples in a grocery store rather than ten because he wishes to use the rest of his money for other purposes, it seems entirely wrong to say the market (or even the grocer) has rationed the apples. The customer makes his choice on the basis of his preferences and the money available (which is the result of previous transactions).

It is true that as a result of market exchanges, goods and resources change hands and (except for land) locations. But in no sense is this rationing or allocation. The resulting arrangement of resources is simply a product of many transactions. Of course, people’s choices of what and what not to buy and sell at which prices create an arrangement of goods and resources that tends to be intelligible in terms of consumers’ subjective priorities. But that does not warrant calling the process rationing or allocation.

Those words — especially ration, which shares its root with rational – suggest conscious decision-making — as part of a plan — by an agent. In a free market there is no consciousness overseeing this “distribution” — another inappropriate word when it comes to describing the market process.

I am not saying anything that a good economist or thoughtful person doesn’t know. I am merely pointing out that we can be more effective in the healthcare debate if we are more precise in our language. We do not face a choice between methods of rationing medical services. We face a choice between rationing according to a bureaucratic plan and being freed to engage in mutually beneficial exchanges.

20 Comments »

  1. [...] Foundation for Economic Education » The Market Doesn’t Ration Health Care.  Another great article that explains the difference between the real free market and what is called the free market.  As the great ones have said–”the market is a process”. [...]

  2. “Rationing” refers to government’s doling out pieces of the same pie, since there is no longer any market that allows for the baking of new pies, i.e., industry growth of the product/service. This is the meaning of socialized medicine.

  3. [...] The rest of TGIF is here. [...]

  4. Good article, but since most educated by the public system have little background for understanding your argument and a 30 sec. attention span, it comes down to the government rationing or the market and who do you trust? Don’t stop trying, however.

  5. It’s great to hear a rational word. Every word of truth helps to dispel an untruth or misconception. Let’s not give up the liberties of free-choice that our forefathers fought so hard to establish.

    HC

  6. Sheldon, this is a brilliant article. You are right that the market does not ration anything, including health care services. It simply offers individuals an opportunity to exchange what they have for what they prefer.

    You are also right that more precise language would improve the quality of discourse and might lead to better outcomes. But certain word and phrases conveying false or misleading ideas are already firmly implanted in the minds of many people, and those who would control the allocation of resources and privileges have no interest in using correct terminology.

  7. Overall, this is an excellent challenge to how the so-called debate is framed by the bureaucrats. If it is generally accepted that the debate is between “rationing” mechanics, it seems a slam-dunk to me, as greedy businessmen are goats, and government bureaucrats are heroes. Which mechanical “rationing” will people get on board with?

    That is why a re-defining of the accepted terms is necessary, and Sheldon Richman has done a masterful service by setting the definitions straight.

    I do have one minor point of disagreement . . . “distribution”, Sheldon says this word is “another inappropriate word when it comes to describing the market process.” I disagree, as a distribution doesn’t necessarily presuppose that it is centrally planned, rationally done, or in the hands of one or a small number of “distributors”. Unlike “rationing” (where in a free market, goods aren’t rationed) goods ARE in fact distributed. Who decides on that distribution is extremely de-centralized, and decided by individual market participants.

  8. The ideas about government that you Americans have are hypocritical. When your house is on fire, govt. help is good; when someone breaks into your house govt intervention is good; but when the govt wants to take away your guns, it is bad. Health and drug companies want govt out of their business, but please govt, help me protect this patent so I can make billions. As if two researchers can’t come up with the same chemical compound to cure pain. Govt is good when you want to steal oil and gas from other countries, but bad when they tax oil and gas. Govt is good to protect ships from pirates, but bad when they regulate rates.
    Most of the “robber” barons made their money with the help of the government, but when the common populace seems to be benefitting from the govt’s largesse, govt is bad.
    Lets get govt out so we can freely download music; import drugs; sell fake Gucci bags and pirate Microsoft Office.

  9. The “market” is the most efficient means of matching supply and demand and setting prices–or at least that we kNow of today.

    Unfortunately, we do not have a market in medicine in the US. Instead of using the market, medicine is both priced and totally controlled by insurance company bureaucrats whose sole goAl is to enjoy princely salaries and lavish perks.

    In most states, there are only one or two companies, so they effectively have a monopoly. And the regulators have been taken over the regulated.

    At the present time, there is the worst possible combination. Physicians and patients have nothing to say about medical care. The insurance companies set prices at their maximum. And they ration health care in a rigid manner. So the USA today has the most expensive health care and the worst health care results of the 30 richest nations.

    Any one that defends the present system is either insane or a bought flack of the insurance companies, and he or she is totally opposed to the free market.

    There are only two choices that would prevent rationing and minimize costs.

    (1) Free market pricing. Outlaw any requirement of medical school. Outlaw medical licensing by the government. Outlaw insurance, and outlaw the use of credit cards. Patients pay in cash. If you have no cash, you die, which under the market will reduce demand and thus prices for the rest of us.

    (2) A single payer system such as Medicare for all, with controls only for fraud

    IT IS INTERESTING THAT IN FRANCE, WHERE THERE IS NO RATIONING AND (UNLIKE IN THE USA)PHYSICIANDS AND PATIENTS HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY ABOUT CARE,MEDICAL CARE COSTS MUCH LESS THAN IN THE USA. Also according to Friday’s WSJ, costs have gone up 115% in France during the past 20 years, while in the USA they have gone up 165% during the same period.

    It is clear that if Truman had succeeded in getting universal health service, medical costs would now be half or less what than they are today. A government-paying system is the sole system in which rationing never can be needed.

    I used to like the old Pat of the 1990s. So I became a charter subscriber of TAC. However, if you keep publishing stupid lies like this article, I certainly will not renew my subscription.

  10. Jan, what WSJ article were you reading? The one I read said how doctors were complaining about services being restricted. People want free parking at the hospital! They want everything “free”! The system is in the red like our medicare/medicaid etc.
    If Truman, or FDR before him, or Teddy Roosevelt had gotten their way you would not have the best sickness care in the world. Or if maybe it was the “best” it would not likely be the standard it is today.
    Sheldon, what is our total spent for food, shelter, clothing, and sickness care as a percent of GDP or household income, or personal income? I suspect we in total pay less for these. Our high standard of living( if we can keep it) allows us to elect to spend for better care because we want it and spend less for the other needs. This figure as a percent of after tax income is likely even better compared to the so called enlightened nations.

  11. Sheldon…a great article. I even learned a couple of new words, “Reify” for instance. Had to look it up.

    Unfortunately, many voters are even less able than I. I’d like to see more such articles but aimed at the voter! This one seemed aimed at academics and politicians and those of us who follow this debate closely.

  12. You start out by saying the free market is the best way, and then basically say since we don’t have it then we should then make it REALLY not free. Medical/insurance companies can only accomplish the things you state BECAUSE of the government.

    You really think that there’s no one out there that could see a huge opportunity for selling cheaper insurance and getting lots of customers? In some states, there are laws that prevent insurance companies from selling catastrophic-only insurance – even if that’s all you wanted.

    You then go on:

    “(1) Free market pricing. Outlaw any requirement of medical school. Outlaw medical licensing by the government. Outlaw insurance, and outlaw the use of credit cards. Patients pay in cash. If you have no cash, you die, which under the market will reduce demand and thus prices for the rest of us.”

    Outlawing methods of interaction between the payer and the payee is not in any way compatible with “Free markets”. You are creating a mythical option that doesn’t follow from your argument, nor make any sense.

  13. [...] the way, do not accept the glib comeback that the market rations too, only by price. As I point out here, the market does not ration. The market is not a conscious, decision-making entity. It’s a [...]

  14. Yes, excellent writing in the accurate use of words to describe ideas and concepts.
    Unfortunately reification is what we do all the time, and yes, is the probably the cause of the deception in which we live.
    Words were ‘given us’ to conceal our thoughts. Laws of nature. The theory of evolution itself is based on reification (where there is purposelessness, things remain without purpose) so how did ‘it’ happen?

  15. [...] The rest of my latest TGIF column is here. [...]

  16. [...] Wrong. Markets don’t ration for the reasons I explain here. [...]

  17. Unfortunately, though this is an interesting point regarding the concept of “rationing”, I don’t think this particular tack will take us very far.

    What health care reform advocates *mean* when they say “ration” is “a mechanism by which some people are denied care that they (think they) need”.

    Literal “rationing” denies people care that they (think they) need, and so does the market. This is true of any mechanism that results in a distribution of scare resources.

    You can force them to spell out what they mean exactly with this kind of tactic, but it won’t change the argument one whit.

  18. I’m saving this one.

    “We face a choice between rationing according to a bureaucratic plan and being freed to engage in mutually beneficial exchanges.” Great line.

  19. The idea of “rationing” implies a fixed supply of a good or service. Passengers in a lifeboat must ration their limited supply of food and water. They have no ability to create or purchase more. A free economy is dynamic. As the demand for a good or service rises, the price rises, which attracts more providers into the market, resulting in a greater supply of the relatively high-priced good or service. Eventually, the price quits rising and levels off as the supply reaches the level of demand. If government imposes a price that is below the market price of the good or service, there will be shortages, which will continue and grow worse because there is no mechanism to attract more providers. The refusal of our politicians to recognize these elementary economic proposition leads to the type of top-down control legislation that we’ve recently seen passed in the health care field. When it fails to work, its proponents will say it’s not big enough and ask for more power and control.

  20. The healthcare cost problem is easy to solve. Make healthcare like any other economic good. You WILL pay for healthcare one way or another, whether by patients directly, by employers (by paying you lower wages), by ‘insurance’ whose premiums you pay, or by your taxes. If most healthcare is paid for by patients DIRECTLY, patients will ‘watch the store’.
    As providers come up with ideas to reduce costs while maintaining satisfactory quality, those providers will gain market share, forcing other providers to follow. This is the only desirable way to lower costs. Anything else is probably rationing.
    What about medical disasters? That’s what insurance is for!!
    I have written this up, complete with numbers from government healthcare cost figures. For a premium of around $210.00 per month and a deductible of only twice the average yearly per family healthcare cost, everyone could have complete coverage for all medical disasters. Almost 90% of people would not collect on this insurance (do you want to ‘collect’ on YOUR life, disability, or fire insurance) and the rest would be happy to have it. The 90% ‘watching the store’ would respond to lower prices and costs would come down.
    This article “Real Health Insurance” is in the ‘Medicine’ section of the website and shows several ways to even improve the true insurance described above.

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