| > This works in an idealized free market. It works in any kind of market that isn't a dumpster fire. The closer to idealized it is the better it works, but it still works in real markets that actually exist. The people who sell towels to Walmart are not an "idealized free market" but it's close enough for practical purposes. > Health care is, for a variety of reasons, fundamentally incompatible with this, even if the powerful and wealthy interests within it are not actively working to destroy some of the basic premises of a free market (like equal information). Health care is not incompatible with it. People place a high value on life-saving treatment, but that's as it should be. It has a high value. If it costs a lot to provide or develop, it's worth the cost. The key is to not pay that cost in cases when it isn't necessary -- but you still want to in cases when it is. The state of US health care and insurance regulations, however, are a dumpster fire. It doesn't have to be like this. The status quo is not optimal. As you say, even just having real price transparency would mark a significant improvement. Fixing that is hard because there are powerful interests behind the status quo, but the same interests are aligned against a single payer system. You can't use it as an argument against one and not the other. |
Towels are a commodity: they're functional, fairly easy to produce, and differentiation is a pretty straightforward tradeoff of higher price for more luxury towels.
Health care is not a commodity. Different services are not interchangeable, and for anything more specialized than basic care, there may only be one provider within a reasonable distance of you that can offer it at all, let alone at an acceptable level of quality.
Furthermore, at the point of sale, much of the time, the "customer" is neither in a condition nor a position to be shopping around. Sometimes, they're literally unconscious. And while some elective procedures and preventative visits can be scheduled and planned, emergency care is by definition not something you can plan ahead for to determine where you can get the best value for your money.
None of these things are because of the specific sorry state of healthcare in the US. They are all fundamental to its very nature. It is impossible to have a truly free market for healthcare, because getting it is literally a matter of life and death for the patient in many cases, which means that by the economics of an unregulated market, the provider can charge them literally whatever they can afford to pay. Or more.
> Fixing that is hard because there are powerful interests behind the status quo, but the same interests are aligned against a single payer system. You can't use it as an argument against one and not the other.
Great, I completely agree.
So instead of trying to fight for a tiny baby step that will improve the system by 1%, let's fight the same people for single payer, a meaningful change that will improve the system by 1000x.