The short answer is often the best
Paul Krugman has the most concise and dead on response I have ever seen to the laissez-faire dead enders in the healthcare debate. This post ought to be printed on index cards and handed out to every wavering Democrat in the Senate.
Health care is not a bowl of cherries
Or a carton of milk, or a loaf of bread.
Both George Will and Greg Mankiw basically argue that we don’t need a government role because we can trust the market to work — hey, we do it for groceries, right?
Um, economists have known for 45 years — ever since Kenneth Arrow’s seminal paper — that the standard competitive market model just doesn’t work for health care: adverse selection and moral hazard are so central to the enterprise that nobody, nobody expects free-market principles to be enough. To act all wide-eyed and innocent about these problems at this late date is either remarkably ignorant or simply disingenuous.
Word. And that is why he has a Nobel Prize and I am just some jerkoff with a website.
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