News & Politics

  • Print
  • Email

Beinhart's Body Politic

There are certain things that capitalism does very well, better than any other system. Number one is the production of wealth. Number two is the production of material goods. Number three is the production of a great deal of freedom.

That being said, let’s look at something that capitalism does not do well—the delivery of health care.
The American health care system, as it stands today, is market driven.

(It’s actually a mix of private and public entities, and was formed in many ways by the tax policies of the 1950s and ‘60s. But compared to other systems, it’s fair to call it market driven.)

Since it’s a market, let’s look at the bottom line. The bottom line is that we spend double what other national health care systems do, without giving us better health.

In fact, the World Health Organization ranks the US 37th out of 191 countries in the delivery of health care.

A lot of our health care money goes to advertising, profit, overhead, and multiple layers of providers, managers, and administrators. I recently heard a representative from the Heritage Foundation on the radio, attacking (of course) the idea of a national health system, on the basis that markets are always more efficient. A national health care system, he announced, would be so bureaucratic that doctors’ offices would spend hundreds of hours filling out forms. But that’s what they do already. Indeed, they have to fill out forms and figure out billing for hundreds of health plans. All of them different. With different deductibles, allowances, and procedures. The nightmare is not awaiting us, it’s with us.

But the issue—and it’s an issue about capitalism, not just how to deliver health services—goes much deeper than that.


Even a cursory review of the history of our advances in medicine and health demonstrate something very dramatic.

They have come from individuals—usually, but not always, in universities, hospitals, medical schools, and genuine research institutes. These include the discovery of germs, vaccines, vitamins and the results of vitamin deficiencies, antibiotics, the pacemaker, oral contraceptives, sulfa drugs, and a host of your other favorites.

This is significant because our giant pharmaceutical companies claim to be the engines of innovation, and therefore any assault on their profits, or the way they do business, would slow the march forward into our brave new world. History does not bear this out.

Even more important—in terms of our general health and well being—has been our vast public works systems. Water works, sewer systems, garbage collection and disposal, universal vaccinations, and health education in our public schools.

The third major source of better health comes from fighting business.

This usually comes from a single individual who stirs up public revulsion against the way business is practiced to such a degree that it results in government regulations. In 1906, Upton Sinclair wrote The Jungle, a docunovel describing how insects, rats, and the human body parts of mutilated workers ended up in packaged meat products. That led to government food inspections and the creation of the FDA. Richard Doll (a Socialist) discovered the link between smoking and lung cancer in 1950. The tobacco industry has been fighting his findings ever since, often by funding fake science, a tactic that’s been used by all the other industries that poison us, either directly or by polluting the planet. In 1962, Rachel Carson wrote Silent Spring, which led to the control of the use of pesticides and from there to the Clean Air and Water Act and the rest of our environmental regulations. In 1965, Ralph Nader wrote Unsafe at Any Speed. Today we have seat belts, air bags, crash tests, safety ratings, and safety regulations. Now we have Al Gore, with his film An Inconvenient Truth. And it is going to create significant change. (By the way, if you have any way to tell Al to run for president in 2008, please do, and do so quickly.)

Have something to say?

Login or register to leave a comment.

whew, pretty scattered this month!

you seem to pretty consistently underplay the systemic problems with Capitalism in this series:

1) that concentrated economic wealth ALWAYS leads to concentrated political power
(this is also true of State Captialist systems like the Soviet Union)

2) that political power will always distort markets

3) consequently, the system is biased toward owners (or managers) of Capital, and consequently workplaces are undemocratic --actually totalitiarian usually-- despite the fact that labor is as essential an ingredient in production as is capital

4) that there are always inherent conflicts between individual firms or industries on the one hand, and the interests of Capital as a class on the other, and that these conflicts become reproduced over time within the structure of the state

5) that as former chief economist of the World Bank Joe Stiglitz points out, there are a number of sectors of the economy where state ownership is as or more rational than market-oriented systems of allocation

6) market allocation ALWAYS produces distortions when inputs into the production process are shared by many diverse industries: for example, the input of land into the markets for housing and agricultural products. how can the market possibly allocate rationally between use of land for McMansions vs use of land to grow vegetables?

Would love to see you explore some of this material in the C.

respectfully, Mark