Skip to main content

The Horrifying Idea that Health Care Is a Right

It’s not uncommon to hear people declare health care a fundamental human right. At least two candidates for U.S. President, Sanders and Warren, would create the obligation for us all to provide health care for everyone through “Medicare for all.” The most common response is to ask how we would pay the tremendous price tag of such a plan. But, while that is a very good question, there is a fundamental moral issue at stake.

Every good and service must be produced by someone. Even with automated production, in some way a human hand is integral to creating all we consume. That most definitely includes health care. Therefore, to claim a fundamental human right to anything that must be produced by someone else, especially if it is to be had for free, is to claim a right to another human’s labor. There is a word for this. It’s “slavery.”

Scoffing at this fact is easy. After all, doctors in nations that provide free health care to all are paid for their services. They hardly look like slaves. But a gilded cage does not change the moral calculus. Nor does the fact that no one outside of convicted criminals in these nations is in chains. Mutual enslavement disperses the terrible costs of being enslaved so that hardly anyone notices it. This does not make enslavement by taxation moral, much less workable.

Suppose there were a single doctor in a small, isolated town where all agreed they all have a right to health care. The doctor would be obligated to treat everyone free of charge. After all, as a fundamental right, there is no justification for denying or charging someone for health care. Before long, the doctor would go bankrupt and could not treat anyone for lack of supplies. So, the townspeople tax themselves to pay the doctor according to prices that he sets. At first, he’s likely to charge what he has in the past.

Soon, the doctor is over-worked, so he raises his prices and discovers he can do so almost with impunity. This affords him the best house in town, wonderful facilities to work in, and assistants to do much of the work. Then the townspeople realize they’re being impoverished while the doctor becomes fabulously wealthy. So they limit the doctor’s prices and tell him what hours he will work and kinds of treatments he can employ. At this point, the doctor is practically enslaved again, along with everybody in town who must pay for everybody else’s health care.

The way this story ends does not describe the United States, but it describes other countries. Canadians come to the United States all the time for medical procedures they cannot obtain in a timely manner in Canada. Some services are very scarce in other countries, even developed ones like Great Britain where waiting lines for services are so long that their Soviet-style goals for shortening them are being scaled back. The bulk of medical innovations flow from the United States where five-year survival rates for most cancer patients is highest in the world. Were Americans to mutually enslave themselves in health care as others have done, innovation in medicine would become far less common.

If health care were like national defense and unlikely provided privately, it would be different. Some necessary things only government can effectively accomplish, though we differ on how much to tax ourselves for them. Health care is nothing like national defense and more available through private markets than when provided by government.

Obviously, America’s health care system, especially the way we pay for it, has problems. The middle of the story above, where the doctor is becoming wealthy, does describe the U.S. today. We are only beginning to recognize that the health care sector, at nearly 20 percent of GDP, is becoming fabulously wealthy as we have effectively attempted to make health care a right. Fortunately, we have not yet turned to dictatorially rationing health services, or strictly regulating prices.

We still have a choice. We can move toward a system whereby health care is provided cooperatively, voluntarily, and competitively in peaceful markets through free enterprise, which includes voluntary charity. Or, we can rely on a dictatorial system of rationing and price regulation made necessary from the morally dubious and socialist utopian act of declaring health care a right.

A billion people were lifted from poverty in twenty-five years as nations like India and China shifted their policies toward free enterprise. This could have been accomplished much sooner but for socialist utopian policies, pursued for decades, based on the notion that humans have a right to what others produce.

The only way to fulfill the utopian dream of making health care a right is by force, through taxation, regulation, and mandates, but the surest way to create hell on earth is to try and create heaven on earth by force. If this is the route we choose in the United States, the result will be anything but a health care heaven.

Byron Schlomach is Director of the 1889 Institute and can be reached at bschlomach@1889institute.org.

The opinions expressed in this blog are those of the author, and do not necessarily reflect the official position of 1889 Institute.


Popular posts from this blog

The Truth About COVID-19: Better Than You Think

As the media turns its attention back to COVID-19, there is a renewed push to shut down the economy. Some states have even begun to scale back reopening plans for their economies; others continue to delay opening. It is essential to look past their catastrophizing and focus on the facts of COVID-19. One fact to consider: while testing has risen 23%, the rate of positive results has only risen 1.3 percentage points to 6.2%. Even as alarmists point to the rise in cases, they still admit that the boost in testing has played a role in the rise in the total number of known cases. Therefore, the total number of positive cases is not of much use in this case, as it only paints a partial picture. The rate of increase in total positive cases is a more meaningful measure, and it has barely increased. Even more important is who is getting infected. The data show that recent cases are primarily younger people. But that’s a good thing; these are precisely the people that are key to building herd ...

Present Reforms to Keep the Ghost of State Questions Past from Creating Future Headaches

Oklahoma, like many western states, allows its citizens to directly participate in the democratic process through citizen initiatives and referendums. In a referendum, the legislature directs a question to the people — usually to modify the state constitution, since the legislature can change statutes itself. An initiative requires no legislative involvement, but is initiated by the people via signature gathering, and can be used to modify statute or amend the constitution. Collectively, the initiatives and referendums that make it onto the ballot are known as State Questions.   Recently, there have been calls to make it more difficult to amend the constitution. At least two proposals are being discussed. One would diversify the signature requirement by demanding that a proportional amount of signatures come from each region of the state. The other would require a sixty percent majority to adopt a constitutional amendment rather than the fifty percent plus one currently in place. ...

Cronyism: Feature, Not a Bug, for Used Car Dealer Licensing

Used car dealers in Oklahoma are governed by the Oklahoma Used Motor Vehicle and Parts Commission (UMPV). Like most licensing boards, it is made up of industry insiders. The UMVP's stated mission is to protect consumers from harm, but its structure and history indicate that its primary concern might be protecting licensed dealers from competition. This, of course, is the prime directive of all licensing boards. My recent paper deals with the licensing of used car dealers.   The person hit hardest by this is the hobbyist, especially in times of economic turmoil.   Imagine someone stuck at home due to coronavirus. We'll call him Frank. He can’t work due to the economic shutdown. Unfortunately, Frank’s lack of work does not mean he no longer has to put food on the table for his family. Fortunately for him, he is able to find a good deal on a used car that needs a little work. Frank has all the tools and garage space necessary to fix up the car and isn't violating any quar...

COVID Inspires Tyranny for the "Good" of Its Victims

The Christian philosopher, C.S. Lewis, once said, "Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies." The moral busybodies C.S Lewis warns of reminds me of those who would have Americans give up their liberty to combat COVID-19.   A recent Oklahoman op-ed compared COVID-19 to World War II, stating that the number of deaths from COVID-19 is approaching the number that died fighting for this country and the freedoms it protects. This comparison is, of course, nonsense. This suggests that a virus with a high survivability rate is an equivalent threat to the Nazi and Japanese regimes that brutally murdered millions. The piece uses wartime rationing of meat and cheese, a sacrifice necessary to ensure men on the front lines had adequate nutrition, to justify Americans accepting counterproductive lockdowns in exchange for additional stimulus c...