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

More on Why Oklahoma Should Have Already Fully Opened

Governor Stitt has declared that some businesses can open on Friday. By May 1, all enterprises in the state will be able to operate more or less normally. Eventually, at some unspecified date, Oklahoma will be fully operating again. But the question remains, and must be asked, “Was the shutdown and extreme social distancing even necessary?” For several reasons, the answer is a clear and unequivocal “No.” Let’s start with this little gem from a blog by an Oklahoma State University academic. “Harvard University epidemiologists determined that continuing extreme social distancing measures into the summer months could actually result in more COVID-19 deaths than a ‘do nothing from the beginning’ alternative.” Now, it might sound like this only confirms the decision to open up now and not extend the shutdown into the summer. But in fact, the Harvard study has a lot more to say about how this epidemic has been handled than might immediately be obvious. The Harvard study recom...

School Teachers Begging for Basics

What if a hospital’s administrators regularly told surgeons to make do without bandages, with dull scalpels, and little to no anesthetic while claiming tight finances? With all the money hospitals have , there would be questions about the administrators’ competence and possibly audits to look for malfeasance. Something like this needs to happen at Oklahoma City Public Schools. My wife is a teacher working in the Oklahoma City Public Schools (OKCPS) system. Last year, she came home telling me how there was no paper available for the notoriously few and regularly broken, undersupplied duplicating machines at her school. What’s more, there was no plan for the district to provide any. In the past, she was told, a parent had donated paper to that particular campus, but that parent had transferred his child to a private school. The school had surplus paper from previous years, but that was gone. There were no plans for the district to provide more. Now, I am well aware that educatio...

School Choice: I Have Erred

I should point out, before the reader gets into this piece, that these are my personal thoughts. Right around last Labor Day, I suddenly had a thought. I quickly made a calculation and realized that, as of the day after Labor Day, I’ve worked full-time in public policy for 25 years – a quarter of a century. While there really is nothing fundamentally more special about a 25 th anniversary than a 24 th or 26 th one, it is a widely-recognized demarcation point. Therefore, it seems worthwhile to take time and write down reflections on my career. My work has touched on several policy areas, but I’ve been thinking a lot about public education lately. That’s the area I practically swam in when I started my career, so here are my thoughts. On the day after Labor Day in 1994 I started work for a member of the Texas House of Representatives. He was the member who always carried a voucher bill, an issue for which I was thrilled to work. By that time, my wife had homeschooled our dau...

About Those Roads in Texas

A s Sooner fans head south for the OU-Texas game next week, they will encounter a phenomenon most of us are familiar with: as you cruise across the Red River suddenly the road gets noticeably smoother. The painted lane stripes get a little brighter and the roadside “Welcome to Texas” visitors’ center gleams in the sunlight, a modern and well-maintained reminder of how much more money the Lonestar State spends on public infrastructure than little old Oklahoma. Or does it? Why are the roads so much, well… better in Texas? Turns out, it isn’t the amount of money spent, at least not when compared to the overall size of the state’s economy and personal income of its inhabitants. Research conducted by 1889 Institute’s Byron Schlomach reveals that Oklahoma actually spends significantly more on roads than Texas as a percentage of both state GDP and personal income . And that was data from 2016, before Oklahoma’s tax and spending increases of recent years. The gap is likely gr...