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Last
Saturday many concerned Americans watched in horror as the House passed the
healthcare reform bill. If this bill makes it through the Senate, it would massively
overhaul the way healthcare is delivered in this country. Today, obviously,
we don't have a perfect system, but this legislation takes all the mistakes
we are making with healthcare and makes them worse. Most of what is wrong
with healthcare stems from decades of government intervention and the
resulting unintended consequences.
But
the government's prescription for the ills caused by intervention is always
more intervention. We see this not only in healthcare policy, but also in
foreign policy, in economic policy, and in monetary policy - basically, in
all areas of public policy. It was even claimed that the House bill would
increase competition in healthcare, and thereby improve the private sector's
business model for insurance.
It is
fascinating that politicians would use the language of the free market in
this way to justify more corporatism. This demonstrates a couple of things.
One, that politicians truly do not understand the very basic tenets of a free
market. By definition, a free market is free from government intervention.
But once a little intervention is accepted as legitimate, politicians will
blame the problems created by their intervention on the free market and
present themselves as saviors that must intervene even more.
It
also demonstrates that politicians know that Americans still believe the free
market is a good thing. People know and understand that competition among
businesses is better for the consumer than a monopoly. However, competition
between a private business and a government or government-favored entity is
not real competition.
In
real competition, your competitor can go bankrupt if they do a bad job.
Everyone knows a government program is forever, no matter how poorly it
performs. In real competition, efficiency is necessary for survival. In
government programs, waste is rewarded as budgets are often determined by how
much money a department is able to consume in a year. In real competition,
one business does not have regulatory or taxation authority over its competitors.
In real competition, businesses get sued and punished for breaking contracts
and defrauding people, and are kept accountable in this way. But just try to
sue the government when you are unjustly harmed by it!
The
reason real competition is a good thing is because good businesses get bad
ones out of the consumer's way. Can the government put someone out of
business? Most certainly! But it will have the opposite effect: an otherwise
good business will be replaced by a poorly performing government agency, or a
government-favored monolithic business that behaves almost like a government
agency.
If
Washington really wanted to give consumers more choices they would remove
legislative and regulatory barriers to competition across state lines for
health insurers. They would remove barriers for new and innovative models of
healthcare and tort reform. They wouldn't have run so many church and
charitable hospitals out of business. Washington is keenly interested in
healthcare reform, but it is certainly not going to increase competition or
to expand your options for healthcare.
Ron
Paul
www.house.gov/paul
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Congressman
Ron Paul of Texas enjoys a national reputation as the premier advocate for
liberty in politics today. Dr. Paul is the leading spokesman in Washington for
limited constitutional government, low taxes, free markets, and a return to
sound monetary policies based on commodity-backed currency. For more
information click on the Project Freedom website.
Published
with the authorization of Dr. Paul.
Copyright
Dr. Ron Paul
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