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excellent article about latest govt giveaway (vote buying)

Posted: Tue Jun 17, 2003 7:53 am
by rainstorm
Drugs and politics
Thomas Sowell (archive)


June 17, 2003 | Print | Send


In the midst of a bipartisan stampede toward "prescription drug benefits for the elderly," someone needs to ask the question: Why should seniors be singled out to be subsidized by the taxpayers, except that their votes are being sought by both parties?


We have all heard the terrible stories about people stricken with diseases requiring costly medications that they cannot afford. If we wish to do something to help such people, fine. But let's help them based on the predicament that they are in, whether they are nineteen or ninety.

Health problems are of course more common among the elderly. But if you know it and I know it, so do others -- including insurance companies, who are in the business of selling protection against all sorts of risks. Again, if there are people who cannot afford insurance and we want to help them, then the criterion should be their economic condition, not their age.

The most affluent segment of the American population has consistently been those from middle age on up. Even if people of above-average income and wealth were unable to afford to pay for health insurance or prescription drugs, how could others afford to pay their bills for them?

Arithmetic cannot be evaded by political rhetoric. We do not have any more money collectively than the sum of what we have individually. Even if it were true that we could not afford the kind of medical care we would like individually, then collectively we certainly could not afford that kind of medical care plus the cost of a government bureaucracy to administer it.

But it is not true that most people cannot afford medical care or prescription drugs. Only about one-fourth of the people without medical insurance have incomes below the poverty level. Many who could easily afford insurance prefer buying other things.

The poor are a relatively small problem that can be dealt with at relatively modest costs. But they are a major excuse for spending the taxpayers' money on people who are not poor and imposing government controls on all of us.

Some politicians say that the government can "bring down the costs" of prescription drugs or of health care in general. But they won't bring down the costs by one cent. What they can do is impose price controls -- and price controls have a centuries-long track record of creating worse problems than they solve.

Rent control has led to housing shortages in Europe, Asia, Australia and North America. Price controls on food have led to hunger in 17th century Italy, 18th century India, 20th century Russia -- and in many other places and times.

When politicians talk about bringing down the cost of prescription drugs they are exploiting a widespread confusion between prices and costs. Prices are not costs. Prices are what pay for costs -- and if you don't pay those costs, you are not going to keep on getting what you want.

The cost of creating a single new medication runs into hundreds of millions of dollars. You can play all the political games you want with prices, but if those hundreds of millions of dollars are not paid for, don't expect people to keep investing that kind of money to develop new drugs to deal with cancer, AIDS, Alzheimer's, and all the other afflictions of human beings.

That money comes from pension plans that millions of people pay into, as well as from banks and other investment sources. Politicians can always find ways to chisel these people out of their money in the short run but the public will pay in the long run.

Fewer new drugs mean needless suffering, disability, hospitalization and premature death. Higher hospitalization rates alone can wipe out savings from lower drug prices. Paying the mounting costs of medical care has turned into a shell game, where everyone tries to get someone else to be stuck with these costs. But these costs are not going away.

Why would Americans, with the highest quality medical care in the world, and a pharmaceutical industry creating more new major prescriptions drugs than anywhere else in the world, want to jeopardize all that for the lure and the promise of political miracles?


from thomas sowell. he explains quite well the differencr between costs and prices

Posted: Tue Jun 17, 2003 8:14 am
by JCT777
Good article. Since I actually work for a major pharmaceutical company, I have heard this before. I truly do hope that politics does not hinder the development of new prescription drugs and vaccines! :roll:

Posted: Tue Jun 17, 2003 8:27 am
by rainstorm
unfortunately it will, 777, all in the name of vote buying.
here is an excellent quote from a CONSERVATIVE college professor.

quotation from Professor Gary Galles of Pepperdine University

“How can there possibly be liberty and justice for all, when, in the name of justice, people claim rights to income, food, housing, education, health care, transportation, ad infinitum? We can't. Positive rights to receive such things, absent an obligation to earn them, must violate others' liberty, by taking some of their income without their consent. They are really just wishes, convertible into benefits for some only by employing the government to violate others' rights not to have what is theirs taken."

If you want your child to benefit from a college education without exposing them to the rancid political correctness of the academic left, perhaps you should consider Pepperdine

Posted: Tue Jun 17, 2003 9:42 am
by ColdFront77
Too bad the money can't come from some place else. Generally speaking, people who need prescription drugs make less money than those that do not need them.

Posted: Tue Jun 17, 2003 12:07 pm
by streetsoldier
Pepperdine may be OK...but Hillsdale College (MI) is much better.

The most important thing about Hillsdale is that they have preserved their academic freedom by refusing any Federal or state subsidies, loans or grants...no other liberal-arts college can make that statement (some theological schools can, but not by choice).

Without FedBucks, Hillsdale is not tied to politically correct courses or teaching methods; neither is the Hillsdale Academy (K-12). Their courses are not geared to the lowest denominator; they do not grade on a curve. They do require (and get) excellence from their students at all levels, and the mean scores of Hillsdale Academy are among the very highest in the nation...as to the College, 98.7% of graduates already have positions in the private sector before graduation, or have been accepted at other colleges/universities for advanced degree studies.

Check it out at http://www.hillsdale.edu ... OK?

Posted: Tue Jun 17, 2003 12:48 pm
by rainstorm
hillsdale sounds cool, soldier!! my worry is by the time the workers finish paying for bill gates(yes, this new entitlement will not be means tested) free drugs, the poor taxpayers wont be able to pay for their own prescription drugs.