Health Care is not a right
Originally published in The Washington Examiner
President Obama argues that his party’s health care reform proposals are
about “bending the price curve” However, the Democrats’ health care agenda
is really about nationalizing health care, based on the concept that health
care is a right, and therefore must be secured by the state. This claim is
misleading for several reasons, but most fundamentally because of its
conflation of “rights” and “needs.” Obamacare opponents need to address
this emotional appeal. After all, who can be against basic “rights”?
Lying on a bed in an emergency room this week following a cardiac scare,
one of us had an opportunity to think this through. He had a need for
healthcare, one which was being met, but to what extent was it meaningful
that he had a right to healthcare?
A right, in both a legal and practical sense, is simply an entitlement due
to an individual that other people are obliged to respect, with a failure
to comply typically resulting in some sort of sanction. Because rights
entail claims on other people, they are necessarily negative in their
construction and limited in their definition. Constitutional rights such
as freedom of speech and religion and the right to property can be clearly
defined in accordance with John Stuart Mill’s harm principle–act as you
will so long as you do not directly harm others.
In contrast, the expansive “rights” demanded by liberals–like the right to
“affordable health care” or to a “decent standard of living”–are not rights
but positive demands that require others to hand over some of the property
to the claimant. Whereas genuine rights protect citizens from state
coercion, the “right to health care” serves to justify state coercion
against a particular part of the population: those who pay taxes. Moreover,
by their very nature, such positive demands cannot be clearly defined and
hence are capable of infinite expansions. As one need is satisfied, others
arise.
Consistent with this distorted view of “rights,” the defining characteristic
of the health care “public option” is its coercive quality: the taxes
imposed on insurance companies, the burdensome individual mandate, the
requirement that employers provide health insurance (subject to government
approval), the loss or reduction of individual choice over treatment
options, and the list goes on.
As the legendary British political thinker Edmund Burke made clear, the
question of how to address needs is not moral, but economic. “What is the
use of discussing a man’s abstract right to food or to medicine?” he
posited. “The question is upon the method of procuring and administering
them. In that deliberation I shall always advise to call in the aid of the
farmer and the physician, rather than the professor of metaphysics.”
Indeed, man’s basic needs are best managed by the free market, which can
coordinate supply and demand through the price system, placing decisions
in the hands of individuals and specialized experts. In the case of health
care, the government injecting billions of dollars into the market will
lead to the warped economic scenario of higher education today. It will
discourage consumers from exercising restraint in their use of a scarce
resource and encourage providers to inflate their prices, while absorbing
capital that could be used more effectively elsewhere.
Far from saving money and helping out the little guy, a health care “public
option” would further increase costs and reduce individual liberty, while
creating a subject client class that has an incentive to lobby for further
handouts.
That's why, while facing a potentially life-threatening emergency last
week, Iain was glad he was being treated via the free market. A voluntary
exchange whereby doctor, patient and insurance company facilitator all
stood to gain something they desired was surely better for all of us than
an arrangement in which one or more parties was being effectively coerced.
President Obama has sought to claim the high ground in the health care
debate through his use of lofty moralizing language designed to delegitimize
any opposition. In order to be effective, Obamacare opponents need to go
beyond opposing particular items on the president’s agenda. They must
retake the high ground by arguing that the welfare state actually violates
individual rights, and hurts the very people it claims to help. As Alexis
de Tocqueville put it so well: “It’s not an endlessly expanding list of
rights–the ‘right’ to education, the ‘right’ to health care, the ’right’
to food and housing. That’s not freedom, that’s dependency. Those aren’t
rights, those are rations of slavery–hay and a barn for human cattle.”
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