If you read the article, there isn't really any central planning. It's one of those "regulated monopolies" with only one (private) contractor. These kind of things always end poorly for the customers in my experience... Either go full free market or have it ran by the government.
It seems to me, based on the article, that the main issue is the profit-seeking ghouls (err.. I mean... "Job Creators") exploiting the government, its limited resources, and faulty regulations-- which are slowly being fixed.
There is ample evidence (e.g. the entire rest of the industrialized world vs. the US healthcare system) that decentralized capitalist control of the donor organ system would lead to an exploitative nightmare that would make the current system look like unassailable perfection.
Playing devils advocate, that exploitative nightmare already exists elsewhere in the world. If a consenting adult wants to sell a kidney or lung, why shouldn't they be allowed to?
“If I don’t sell my kidney,
I will be forced to sell
my one-year-old daughter.”
It's an odd sort of cognitive bias to conclude from this article that the selling of kidneys is the problem. You don't think they should be given the option of selling their kid or their kidney?
My takeaway from this article is that the market just isn't developed enough. If they were able to sell their kidneys to richer westerners then they could easily get 10x or 100x as much money.
In that part of the world that's easily enough to make the best way to extend your statistical lifetime be to sell your kidney. You'd get access to better healthcare for life, your children could get an education etc.
"Our citizens"? I didn't know the Taliban could be found on HN. You should do an AMA.
What I'm pointing out is that you seemingly only care because the proposed scheme might cause you or other affluent people to interact somehow with the desperately poor. So the knee-jerk reaction is that we should ban the scheme entirely.
But those people will still be desperately poor without it, even more so. It's really arrogant to say that they shouldn't be given the option.
Would I sell my own kidney if there was a market for it? No, almost certainly not. But I don't live in those circumstances.
But we're talking about a country where the life expectancy is around 60 years, and where people are making something in the very low 4-digit USD/yr.
It's not hard to imagine how that could be turned into a win-win if the more affluent were able to buy kidneys.