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31 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (1994)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0030 and id is 1 raw text is: June 21, 1994 No. 31
FREE MARKET IMPOSTORS IN THE
HEALTH CARE POLICY FORUM
Many of the health care reform proposals
floating around in the Congress are labeled free
market by their sponsors.   Even the Clintons
characterize their proposal as providing a free-
market health insurance system.    Health care

reformers obviously recognize
leery  about   government's
taking over the health care
business and are playing to the
legitimate popular desire for a
government-free health care
market.
Before signing on to a
reform  plan  dubbed   free
market by its author, policy

makers
label is

that the public is

If the butyer- is r-equt
the seller- is r equi
sp~ecified pr-oduct o
most essential attn
m arket is absent.

should apply a few simple tests to see if the
warranted.

The essence of a free market is voluntary
exchange between the buyer and seller of a product
or service on terms that are freely negotiated
between them. If the buyer is required to buy or the
seller is required to sell a specified product or
service, the most essential attribute of a free market
is absent. If something other than the producer's
perception of what best satisfies buyers' demands
dictates the design or specification of the product or
service, the market is not free. If the price of the
product or service is determined in any way other

than by unconstrained offers by buyers to purchase
and by producers to sell, there is no free market for
that product or service.
Applying these tests, the policy maker should
ask whether a proposed health care reform plan
requires people to have health insurance. President
Clinton has made universal coverage the core
objective of his reform proposal, and all but a few
of the plans offered by Congressmen and Senators
are promoted as doing the same. Most of these
proposals, following the Clintons' lead, would make
coverage mandatory. By its very nature, any such
mandate, no matter how it is to be implemented, is
at odds with the free-market requirement of a
willing buyer engaging in a voluntary purchase.
Does the plan specify the benefits that the
health insurance policy must cover? If it does, the
insurer would not be free to design the policy to
meet the perceived demands of different buyers. In
view of the enormous variety
of the relevant circumstances
o           oi    of the population to be insured,
iredtosella       no   single  one-size-fits-all
t se     ll a    policy    would    satisfy
bto r   ie te    everybody's preferences.  If
the plan is to merit the free
market label, insurers must be
free to tailor their policy
offerings  to  the  differing
circumstances and demands of their diverse groups
of customers, who must be free to purchase the kind
of policy they -  not the government -  believe
will best meet their needs. A plan that lays out the
benefits that the insurance policy must provide is in
the spirit of government command and control, not
that of a free market.
Does the proposed plan specify the terms of the
sale of the health insurance coverage? Would the
insurer be free to charge differing premiums for any
given coverage, based on actuarial assessments of
the health risks of the differing groups of people to
be insured? A health insurance plan that insists on

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 informing 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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