Letters“Choice, competition, reducing costs—those are the things that I want to see accomplished in this health reform bill,” President Obama told talk-show host Michael Smerconish last week (http://tinyurl.com/nb7r87). Choice and competition would be good. They would indeed reduce costs. If only the president meant it. Or understood it. In a free market, a business that is complacent about costs learns that its prices are too high when it sees lower-cost competitors winning over its customers. The market—actually, the consumer—holds businesses accountable and keeps them honest. No “public option” is needed. So the hope for reducing medical costs indeed lies in competition and choice. Today competition is squelched by government regulation and privilege. But Obama’s so-called reforms would not create real competition and choice. They would prohibit it. Competition is not a bunch of companies offering the same products and services in the same way. That sterile notion of competition assumes we already know all that there is to know. But consumers often don’t know what they want until it’s offered, and their preferences and requirements change. Businesses don’t know exactly what consumers want or the most efficient way to produce it until they are in the thick of the competitive hustle and bustle. Nobel laureate F.A. Hayek taught that competition is a “discovery procedure.” In other words, the “data” of supply and demand emerge only through the market process. We need open-ended competition not merely to see which rival is better, but to learn things we didn’t know before and aren’t likely to learn any other way. “Competition is valuable onlybecause, and so far as, its results are unpredictable and on the whole different from those which anyone has, or could have, deliberately aimed at,” Hayek wrote. Well-meaning politicians have created untold misery by assuming they and their experts know enough already. The health care bills are perfect examples. If competition is a discovery process, the congressional bills would impose the opposite of competition. They would forbid real choice. In place of the variety of products that competition would generate, we would be forced to “choose” among virtually identical insurance plans. Government would define these plans down to the last detail. Every one would have at least the same “basic” coverage, including physical exams, maternity benefits, well-baby care, alcoholism treatment and mental-health services. Consumers could not buy a cheap, high-deductible catastrophic policy. Every insurance company would have to use an identical government-designed pricing structure. Prices would be the same for sick and healthy. In this respect, it wouldn’t matter whether or not Congress created a “public option,” a government insurance plan. In either case, bureaucrats would dictate virtually every aspect of the health-insurance business. What Obama says in favor of a public option—as of today, at least —tells us how little he understands competition. The public option’s virtue, he told Smerconish, is that “there wouldn’t be a profit motive involved.” But as St. Lawrence University economist Steven Horwitz writes in The Freeman magazine, profit is not just a motive (http://tinyurl.com/m4nd2j). Profit (along with loss) is what enables competition to perform its discovery role: “Suppose for a moment that we try to take the profit motive out of health care by going to a system in which government pays for and/or directly provides the services. ... (P)ublic-spirited politicians and bureaucrats have replaced profit-seeking firms. “By what method exactly will the officials know how to allocate resources? By what method will they know how much of what kind of health care people want? And more important, by what method will they know how to produce that health care without wasting resources? “... In markets with good institutions, profit-seeking producers can get answers to these questions by observing prices and their own profits and losses in order to determine which uses of resources are more or less valuable to consumers. ... (P)rofits and prices signal the efficiency (or lack thereof) of resource use and allow producers to learn from those signals.” Profit is the key to competition. Anyone who claims to favor competition but looks down at profit has no idea what he is talking about. John Stossel is co-anchor of ABC News’ “20/20” and the author of “Myth, Lies, and Downright Stupidity.” He has a blog at http://blogs.abcnews.com/johnstossel. Copyright 2009 by JFS Productions, Inc. Distributed by Creators.com
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The following are comments from the readers. In no way do they represent the view of gvnews.com. Jean Pace wrote on Sep 4, 2009 7:34 AM: " Mr. Stoessel, we're talking about health care for human beings here - life and death issues. Not televisions. Or peanut butter. Where there is great profit, there are always profiteers and healthcare has been their exclusive playground for the last two decades. Enough. There are hardworking people in my neighborhood who live in constant fear of getting sick because they have no health insurance, It's down to food or healthcare insurance. A strong public option won't destoy the competition, it will encourage a much-needed cleanup of practices while providing care for those who most need help. " Norma Fetherolf wrote on Sep 4, 2009 7:58 AM: " I notice the previous comment does not refute anything Mr Stossel has to say. Instead he or she attacks Mr Stossel. Mr. Stossel makes some good points. There are currently over 1000 health insurance companies in this country yet people can only buy from a few of them in each state. Let us buy from any company in any state and see what happens to health care costs. If they go up, it is no different than what we have now. If they go down, as many feel they will, we have made real change in health care. " patman wrote on Sep 4, 2009 8:21 AM: " yeah all these years and the medical insurance in the free market has gone up not down. nothing in the new medical care bill would stop you from paying whatever you want. what a pack of misinformation this guy puts out. the last administration didn't want anyone to buy in canada because of the lower cost of drugs. get real and spread some truth stossel. " Tristan wrote on Sep 21, 2009 5:52 PM: " John your entire article is wrong... Obama is increasing competition by adding an insurance company that will actually help people. When people get sick the insurance will do what its supposed to do rather then walking away like most of your american insurance companies do already. The point is the competition wasn't helping the market and the insurance companies were able to do whatever they wanted because there was no other choice. What Obama is doing is actually pushing the other insurance companies into providing better services. There is nothing saying they have to follow his lead if they want to get pushed out of the market and deny the U.S citizens fundamental human rights: well thats their problem, but if they want to stay competitive then they will try and top what the government is offering ,The fact is you know nothing about supply, demand, and the market because what Obama is doing may not be a pure Market economy as Adam Smith intended,(Government involved in the economy) but in spirit the extra competition is exactly what a Market economy is. If the insurance companies want to earn the citizens money, then they have to be the best choice in insurance plans " Submit a Comment |
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kbc wrote on Sep 2, 2009 1:48 PM: