Social insurance does not undermine free societies:
Insurance and Freedom, by Paul Krugman, Commentary, NY Times: ...How many Americans will be denied essential health care in the name of freedom?
I?m referring, of course, to the question of how many Republican governors will reject the Medicaid expansion that is a key part of Obamacare. What does that have to do with freedom? In reality, nothing. But when it comes to politics, it?s a different story. ... From the enthusiastic reception American conservatives gave Friedrich Hayek?s ?Road to Serfdom,? to Reagan, to the governors now standing in the way of Medicaid expansion, the U.S. right has sought to portray its position not as a matter of comforting the comfortable while afflicting the afflicted, but as a courageous defense of freedom. ...
These days, conservatives make very similar arguments against Obamacare. For example,?Senator Ron Johnson?of Wisconsin has called it the ?greatest assault on freedom in our lifetime.? And this kind of rhetoric matters, because when it comes to the main obstacle now remaining to more or less universal health coverage ? the reluctance of Republican governors to allow the Medicaid expansion that is a key part of reform ? it?s pretty much all the right has. ...
[However], Medicaid enjoys?remarkably strong public support. And now that health reform is the law of the land, the economic and fiscal case for individual states to accept Medicaid expansion is overwhelming. ... But such practical concerns can be set aside if you can successfully argue that insurance is slavery.
Of course, it isn?t. In fact, it?s hard to think of a proposition that has been more thoroughly refuted by history than the notion that social insurance undermines a free society. ...
In fact, the real, lived experience of Obamacare is likely to be one of significantly increased individual freedom. For all our talk of being the land of liberty, those holding one of the dwindling number of jobs that carry decent health benefits often feel anything but free, knowing that if they leave or lose their job, for whatever reason, they may not be able to regain the coverage they need. Over time, as people come to realize that affordable coverage is now guaranteed, it will have a powerful liberating effect.
But what we still don?t know is how many Americans will be denied that kind of liberation ? a denial all the crueler because it will be imposed in the name of freedom.
Posted by Mark Thoma on Monday, April 8, 2013 at 12:33 AM in Economics, Politics, Social Insurance?| Permalink? Comments?(19)
Source: http://economistsview.typepad.com/economistsview/2013/04/paul-krugman-insurance-and-freedom.html
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