Book contents
- People Before Markets
- People Before Markets
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Contents by Topic
- Authors
- 1 Introduction: Why Are You Here?
- 2 Some Philosophical Help with “Neoliberalism”
- Part I Our World
- Part II Our Lives
- 12 Why Do Some People Want to Manage Human Fertility?
- 13 How Should Childbirth Happen?
- 14 Who Is Responsible for Children’s Food?
- 15 How Should We Care for the Elderly?
- 16 How Are People Who Take Drugs Treated?
- 17 How Should We Design Access to a Healthcare System?
- Part III Our Work
- Index
- References
17 - How Should We Design Access to a Healthcare System?
from Part II - Our Lives
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 October 2022
- People Before Markets
- People Before Markets
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Contents by Topic
- Authors
- 1 Introduction: Why Are You Here?
- 2 Some Philosophical Help with “Neoliberalism”
- Part I Our World
- Part II Our Lives
- 12 Why Do Some People Want to Manage Human Fertility?
- 13 How Should Childbirth Happen?
- 14 Who Is Responsible for Children’s Food?
- 15 How Should We Care for the Elderly?
- 16 How Are People Who Take Drugs Treated?
- 17 How Should We Design Access to a Healthcare System?
- Part III Our Work
- Index
- References
Summary
Healthcare is a wonderful, tragic case of the limits of individual capacity in making consumer choices. Often health and medical decisions are so complicated, so expensive, and have consequences so far in the future that it is practically impossible for ordinary individuals to make informed choices about their medical priorities. Given this, it is a natural reach for expert help (i.e., doctors), and the hand of government regulation (in the form of national insurance schemes). Here, Gersel, Souleles, and Thaning look at two national healthcare systems (Switzerland and the United States) that make use of market-based and for-profit mechanisms to provide healthcare. The crucial difference between them is that the United States remains wedded to the idea that individuals can and should make their own informed choices about their care (see pp. 32–36). In contrast, Switzerland has put a hard limit on what can reasonably be expected of individual choice in healthcare provision and has enacted a number of mandatory regulatory guardrails. It should come as no surprise, at this point in the case book, that citizens are taken better care off in the system that actually recognizes limits to individual consumptive behavior in healthcare, rather than sticking to the presumption of the hyper-intelligent Homo-economicus. It turns out we can in this case predict what people need, better than they themselves can through their purchases in an open market (see pp. 38–44).
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- Information
- People before MarketsAn Alternative Casebook, pp. 354 - 380Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022