Big Business Goes Big for Health Care Reform
“What disturbs Americans of all ideological persuasions is the fear that almost everything, not just government, is fixed or manipulated by some powerful hidden hand,” Frank Rich wrote in the New York Times a few months ago.
That manipulation should disturb us. But contrary to Rich, it is not the work of “corporatists” who have sprung up to attack Progressive reforms proposed by Obama and the Democratic majority. Manipulation is what we got many years ago when we traded a more or less free market for the “Progressive” interventionist state. When government is big, the well-connected always have an advantage over the rest of us in influencing public policy.
Observe: Although President Obama and big-government activists demonize health-insurance companies, the companies “are still mostly on board with the president’s effort to overhaul the U.S. health-care system,” the Wall Street Journal reports.
And even though the activists criticize Big Pharma, “The drug industry has already contributed millions of dollars to advertising campaigns for the healthcare overhaul through advocacy groups like Healthy Economies Now and Families USA. It has spent about $1 million on similar advertisements under its own name,” the Times reports.
Big Business, Big Pharma, and Big Insurance
Big Pharma and Big Insurance want Obama-style healthcare reform?
It’s not so hard to understand. “The drug makers stand to gain millions of new customers,” the Times said. And from the Journal: “If health legislation succeeds, the [insurance] industry would likely get a fresh batch of new customers. In particular, many young and healthy people who currently forgo coverage would be forced to sign up.” No wonder insurers are willing to stop “discriminating” against sick people. (Forget that the essence of insurance is discrimination according to risk.)
Not that Big Pharma and Big Insurance like every detail of the Democratic plan. Drug companies don’t want Medicare negotiating drug prices—for good reason. If it forces drug prices down, research and development will be discouraged. (Depending on whom you believe, Obama may or may not have agreed with the drug companies on this point.)
As for the insurance companies, they worry—legitimately—that a government insurance company—the so-called public option—would drive them out of business. This isn’t alarmism. It’s economics. The public option would have no bottom line to worry about and therefore could engage in “predatory pricing” against the private insurers.
But despite these differences, the biggest companies in these two industries are on board with “reform.”
Horwitz’s First Law In Action
It illustrates economist Steven Horwitz’s First Law of Political Economy: “No one hates capitalism more than capitalists.” In this case, big business wants to shape—and profit from—what inevitably will be an interventionist healthcare “reform.” Can you think of the last time a major business supported a truly free market in anything?
In light of all this, it was funny to watch Democrats and their activist allies panic over the protests at the August congressional town meetings around the country. Tools of the corporate interests! they cry. But anyone opposing “socialized medicine” can’t be a mouthpiece for big business because, as we’ve seen, big business supports government control. Conservative groups may be encouraging people to vent their anger at congressmen who pass burdensome legislation without even bothering to read it, but that’s no reason to insult the protestors as pawns. What’s wrong with organizations helping like-minded people to voice their opinions? Why do Democrats, such as Speaker Nancy Pelosi, dismiss citizen participation as “AstroTurf”—not real grassroots—only when citizens oppose the kind of big government they favor?
They weren’t so dismissive when George W. Bush was president and people protested—appropriately—his accumulation of executive powers.
“When handfuls of Code Pink ladies disrupted congressional hearings or speeches by Bush administration officials,” Glenn Reynolds wrote, “it was taken as evidence that the administration’s policies were unpopular, and that the thinking parts of the populace were rising up in true democratic fashion. . . . But when it happens to Democrats, it’s something different: A threat to democracy, a sign of incipient fascism. . . . House Speaker Nancy Pelosi calls the ‘Tea Party’ protesters Nazis. . . . So when lefties do it, it’s called “community organizing.”
When conservatives and libertarians do it, it’s “AstroTurf.”
Give me a break.










Pingback by Monsieur Bastiat, Call Your Office | The Freeman | Ideas On Liberty on 18 November 2009:
[...] those whom the criminal justice system has forgotten. Robert Higgs looks at the case for slavery. John Stossel finds it curious that big pharmaceutical and big insurance companies like Obama’s healthcare [...]
Comment by Terry on 30 November 2009:
In health care legislation there is talk of “preventive medicine”. I’m not sure exactly when it happened but the pharmaceutical companies have stolen “preventive medicine” and made it their own. They call “preventive medicine” getting more and more people on medicines before they really need it and before a serious disease condition develops. “Preventive” used to mean…exercise, nutrition, rest, detoxing and destressing. Now it means popping more pills…so of course the big Pharms are going to like a health care bill that supports “prevention”. Just look at the flu “prevention” program.
Comment by Clay Barham on 9 December 2009:
VISIBLE OR INVISIBLE HAND
Which do most people want? Do they want what politicians claim is the rational, real and predictable visible hand running the economy? Or, would they prefer what Adam Smith called the Invisible Hand leading the way? The realistic, determined visible hand gives us a feeling of certainty without mystery, and most of us do not like mystery, except in novels. However, history in the last 400 years have shown us that the mystery of the uncertain invisible hand is the only economic system, if you can call a mysterious force a system, to produce prosperity and greater human happiness. Where does it come from? It comes from all the thoughts out of bubbles of restrictive tradition and actions out of the box by free men and women, because they had no fear of offending a monarch. Their thoughts and acts cannot be predicted, however. The results are an uncertain mystery. No rational academic could ever stand and support the unknown against the known, even though reliance on the unknown made America the richest, freest nation in the world. Leave mystery to the novelist, certainty to the politician and God help the rest of us. Claysamerica.com
Comment by Rick on 19 December 2009:
Certainty or Mystery?
Clay Barnham summarized it well, however, I will attempt to simplify and clarify.
True believers have certainty in mystery supported by evidence.
Politicians (stateists) have certainty in evidence manufactored by tyrants.
Pingback by Unfettered Government: Live It Up Edition on 21 December 2009:
[...] Big Business Goes Big for Health Care Reform “What disturbs Americans of all ideological persuasions is the fear that almost everything, not just government, is fixed or manipulated by some powerful hidden hand,” Frank Rich wrote in the New York Times a few months ago. [...]