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29 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (1994)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0028 and id is 1 raw text is: IRET
Advisory
March 14, 1994 No. 29
QUOTAS ON QUALITY HEALTH
CARE
The Clintons' health care task force blames part
of the rising cost of health care on the emergence of
too many medical specialists.
The Clintons' proposal would
decree that no more than 45%
of medical school graduates   dee e that no
would be allowed to go on to  dc    a nc
become specialists. The rest  medicalschooi
would be forced to become     allowed   to  t
general    practitioners.    syecialists...th
Furthermore, the limited slots  advanced  tr
for advanced training would be  allocated by a
allocated by area of specialty  by  medical
and by medical school, and the  students woul
students would be selected    racial and eth
under racial and ethnic quotas.
The proposed limitation on
access to knowledge and the infringement of

individual liberty in choosing a career is frightening.
Imagine the uproar if the government were to limit
slots in seminaries, alter the proportions among
religious denominations, and allocate students by
formula to the various positions. Imagine any effort
by the government to limit the number of persons
studying or practicing law, engineering, plumbing -
indeed any other profession.  That would be
unthinkable. Somehow, though, common sense flies
out the window when it comes to health care,
especially now  that government funding and
regulation have come to dominate the field.

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The specialist provision is both bizarre medicine
and bizarre economics. How can something cost
too much and be in glut? Normally, over-supply is
associated with depressed prices. For example, a
bumper harvest of wheat results in lower wheat
prices, a bane to the farmer but a boon to
consumers.
On the other hand, an increase in demand for an
item raises prices. If a fad sweeps the nation, the
price of the adored item zooms, or shortages
develop. Witness the not-available-at-any-price-the-
week-before-Christmas phenomenon of the cabbage
patch dolls of a few years ago.
When customers demand more of a product or
service, they bid up the price, signalling producers
to supply more.  Enormous
advances     in  medical
oposal would      technology have made better
e than 45%c of     treatments possible.  The
esanu4dof     public is eager to buy those
uates would be    treatments.  But specialists
n  to  become     have to be trained to deliver
ited slots for    the new   techniques.  The
would    be    higher earnings of those so
f specialty and   trained  encourages   more
ol,  and   the    students to enter those fields.
selected under     Thus the consumers (patients)
uotas.            have called forth a greater
supply of the specialists. This
is  the   only  explanation
consistent with higher prices

and  higher production
expansion of the industry.

a demand-driven

The Clintons seem to think, instead, that the
specialists invented themselves, and somehow force
patients to come to them and pay higher prices.
The idea that there are simultaneously too many
specialists and that they are nonetheless able to
charge too much flies in the face of every known
economic law.
The Clintons' proposal attacks symptoms
without any regard to or understanding of their

Institute for
Research on the
Economics of
Taxation

IRET is a non-profit, tax exempt 501(c)(3) economic policy research and educational organization devoted to inorming the
public about policies that will promote economic growth and efficient operation of the free market economy.
1730 K Street, N., Suite 910, Washington, D.C. 20006
Voice 202-463-1400 * Fax 202-463-6199 0 Internet www.iret.org

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