Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by Scaevolus 4721 days ago
Aggregate essentials (food, shelter) are generally inelastic. You don't choose if you need food or not. Being able to select what food you buy (based on price, etc) forces the prices to be competitive.

Not being able to select healthcare based on price means nothing checks rising prices. Regulations have made healthcare into a cartel where members won't compete to be affordable.

1 comments

Aggregate essentials (food, shelter) are generally inelastic. You don't choose if you need food or not.

Right. And there were a lot of famines in the past. It's only by "flood[ing] the market with supply (using technology to both drive down costs and replace what people do)" that we've managed (in the West, at least) to ensure that most people no longer have to worry about food.

This is not a complete explanation. The most important factor is that Americans just have more resources than most humans in history. Transfer any but the absolute poorest Americans to anywhere on earth, at anytime in history, with their current income, and they'll be just as well-fed as they are here and now, even if the local farmers are driving oxen.

Another way of stating this, is that edible commodities are just as fungible as all other commodities. If Egyptians could afford to purchase enough wheat to feed themselves, they would.