Socialism, Capitalism and Health Care
James Petras • November 27, 2017
Introduction
The
US political and economic elites have always bragged that capitalism is
far superior to socialism in terms of providing people’s personal
welfare. They claim that citizens live longer, healthier and happier
lives under capitalism.
The debate between the supporters of the US Affordable Care Act or ‘Obamacare’ and its most vehement opponents under President Trump is not part of any larger system debate since both ‘sides’
base their vision and plans for medical care on private, for-profit
corporate insurance schemes. This source of funding would ‘harness
market forces’ to deliver quality medical care…in a marketplace of ‘free
competition’, in which every American, even the most fragile,
cancer-ridden patient, would be an engaged stakeholder, weighing a huge
menu of free choices…
The
real comparison of how these economic systems provide basic health care
should be based on showing which provides the best population outcomes,
personal satisfaction and community security across national
boundaries. National health systems top the chaotic private system in
these parameters.
On the other hand, the US tops all European countries in terms of the percentage
of workers and family members who avoid necessary trips to the doctor
because they fear financial ruin from the inflated costs of their
private health care. In other words, majorities of people,
dependent on private for-profit insurance schemes to provide health
care, cannot afford to visit a medical facility, doctor or clinic even
to treat a significant illness. The type of economic system funding
health services determines the likelihood of a patient actually going to
seek and receive important medical care that will preserve life, one’s
ability to work and enjoy some level of satisfaction.
This
essay will include a brief discussion of the social and political
conditions, which gave rise to the socialized, and clearly more
effective, health care system. And we will touch on the consequences the
two health systems in terms of people’s life expectancy and quality of
life.
Comparing Costs of Medical Visitation by Economic System
The
US is the only developed country relying on a private, for-profit
insurance system to fund and deliver medical care for its working age
population. In contrast, all countries in the European Union have some
form of publicly funded and delivered health plans for its workers.
One of the key quality measures of a health care system is a patient’s access to timely competent medical care.
The
Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OCECD) recently
conducted a systematic comparison of seven countries, with different
levels of GDP, and the percentage of people in each country who are able
to afford medical consultations for necessary medical care.
The
European countries all have established national public health programs
with clear goals and measures in terms of outcomes. The US is the only
nation to rely on privately administered and funded health care systems
for its working age population.
The Results
Over
one-fifth (22%) of the US working age population believe they cannot
afford to consult a doctor or medical clinic – in the event of an
illness or accident. In contrast, less than eight percent of European
workers view themselves as unable to afford necessary medical care. For
the largest EU nations, less than 5% of the working population avoids
care because of a perceived inability to pay for essential services. US
workers are five times more likely to voluntarily forego health care, often with disastrous long-term consequences.
If
we compare the US with its ‘free market’ private insurance run system
with any EU nation, we find consistent results: Access to competent,
essential medical services in the US is far worse!
In
Germany and France, the EU’s most developed nations, working age
citizens and their family members have three to ten times better access
to health care than the US. 8% of workers in France and 2% in Germany
postpone necessary visits to the doctor because of a perceived inability
to pay. Among middle developed EU nations, 4% in the UK and 4.5% in
Italy cite financial reasons for skipping essential medical care –
compared to 22% of working age Americans.
Even
in the least developed EU nations, Spain and Portugal, with the highest
unemployment rates and lowest per capita income, workers have greater
access to health care. Only 2.5% of workers in Spain and 7.5% in
Portugal view costs as a reason to avoid visiting their doctor.
High Tech Billionaires Speak of ‘Values’ while Maximizing Profits
‘Protecting our community is more important than maximizing our profits’, the multi-billionaire Mark Zuckerberg opined this month, after his company, Facebook posted its first ever $10 billion quarterly earnings result. (FT 11/16/17 P 8)
Zuckerberg
and entourage had apparently ventured into Middle America discovering
to their shock that American communities were in the midst of a narcotic
addiction crisis, which had caused hundreds of thousands of deaths and
disrupted the lives of millions of addicts’ family members. The natives
of Middle America were more concerned about access to effective
addiction treatment than their access to Facebook! Zuckerberg,
with his legions of highly educated foreign workers on the West Coast,
conveniently missed the chance to identify the source of the American
addiction crisis: The over-prescription of opioid pain medications by
tens of thousands of private US medical practitioners, pushed by the
giant US pharmaceutical industry in a 2 decades-long medical genocide
that the nations of Europe had so ‘miraculously’ avoided because of
their centralized, regulated, socialized health systems.
While
the US may have the least available and least affordable health care
for working people, it can certainly boast about producing the highest
number of super-rich in the world. Five of the world’s largest companies
are US-owned with a combined market capitalization of $3.3 trillion for
the top US tech giants. Europe’s largest tech company, SAP, is sixty
notches below.
The
US giant mega-billion dollar tech companies and CEO’s are also
mega-billion dollar tax-evaders who stash their fortunes overseas and
avoid the inconvenience of having to contribute to any national health
programs for workers – whether in the US or elsewhere. The monopoly tech
corporations’ wealth and power are one important reason why over a
fifth of working age Americans cannot afford necessary medical care. As
one acute observer noted, ‘The new high tech elite tend to cloak their self interest by talking about values which has the collateral benefit of avoiding talk about wealth.’(FT 11/17/17 P9)
The
scarcity of European multi-billion dollar tech CEOs, like the American
Zuckerberg and Gates, is linked to the domestic tax systems that provide
public financing and management of effective medical service serving
hundreds of millions of European workers.
In
other words, the US, with its far more extreme concentration of wealth
and social inequality, continues to have the greatest level of health
care inequality among industrialized nations.
Europe
is not without inequalities, monopolies and underfunded health programs
but it delivers far better and more accessible care to its citizens
than the private capitalist health system promoted in the US.
Historical Roots of the Superior European Health Care System
The
power of monopoly capital is one of the key factors resulting in the
deteriorating quality of health care for the US working population.
Another factor is the lack of consistent working class struggle in the
US compared to Europe. After the Second World War, there were huge waves
of working class strikes across France, Italy and the UK. Various
communist parties in continental Europe played a leading role within the
trade unions demanding for publicly funded, national health care. In
the UK, Socialists and the Labor Governments were pushed by their trade
union members to craft a national health system to meet the needs of
workers and their families. While Germany had a basic national health
system dating from the time of Bismarck in the late 19th
century, the socialist economy and public services developing in the
German Democratic Republic (East Germany) after the Second World War
provided an alternative for West German workers who then successfully
pushed for the implementation of an advanced welfare state, including a
socialized medical care system, within the thoroughly capitalist German
Federation.
In
the 1970’s Spain and Portugal shed their fascist past and post-war
dictatorships. The militant trade unions and leftist parties ascended to
power on promises to implement social-welfare programs, which, even
with their economic limitations, included highly effective national
health programs. Life expectancies rose dramatically.
The
US has neither welfare nor national medical programs for its working
population. Despite a brief interlude of American workers’ strikes
shortly after WWII, leftist militants, communists and socialists were
purged and corrupt business-linked trade union leaders took over. Rather
than struggle for an effective national system of publicly funded
medical care, the trade unions, linked to the Democratic Party, pushed
their membership to struggle for ‘nickel and dime’ wage increases –
accepting a system of the most expensive, and unaccountable private
health care in the world.
The
capitalist US has been the only country to deprive its working age
citizens and their family members of an effective national health
system. After over 60 years, the results are damning. Providing
essential medical care for American workers, through the various forms
of private, for-profit insurance schemes, has resulted in an
uncontrolled health care cost inflation making manufacturing in the US
far more expensive than its European, Japanese or Canadian competitors.
From
2001 up to 2018, under Presidents Bush, Obama and Trump, the US
taxpayers have spent $5.6 trillion dollars on privately delivered,
for-profit medical care with unimpressive results in terms of population
health and life expectancy. On a per-capita basis, this is twice the
amount spent on citizens of the EU who have consistently enjoyed rising
life expectancy and improving health parameters. Despite this enormous
investment of money in a chaotic, ineffective private system, the US
Treasury has steadfastly maintained it could not finance a National
Health Program for the population.
Present and Future Consequence of a Capitalist ‘Health System’
Today
millions of US wage earners can expect to suffer shorter and less
healthy lives than their counterparts in other industrialized countries
in Europe and Japan. The opioid addiction epidemic among US workers,
caused entirely by uncontrolled prescription of highly addictive
narcotics by private practitioners and pushed by the profit-hungry US
pharmaceutical industry, has led to over 600,000 deaths by overdose and
millions of lives shortened by the brutal realities of addiction and
degradation. This legally prescribed epidemic is unique to the United
States where an estimated 15% of construction workers need treatment for
addiction, millions have dropped out of the labor market due to
addiction and the medical plans of numerous US building trade unions are
facing bankruptcy because of the cost of addition-treatment for its
members. The anti-addiction drug, Suboxone, is the most expensive
and heavily prescribed medication for some union health plans. The
reasons for this atrocity are clear: Injured American workers were being
prescribed long courses of cheap, but highly addictive opioids to
address their pain during cursory visits to ‘medical clinics’, rather
than providing them with the more expensive but appropriate post-trauma
care involving physical therapy and rest. The bosses and supervisors,
who just wanted ‘warm bodies’ back on the job, were oblivious to the
impending disaster.
Mega
billion dollar private drug companies manufactured and promoted highly
addictive prescription narcotics and paid ‘lobbyists’ to persuade US
politicians and regulators to ‘look the other way’ as the addiction
epidemic unfolded. Corporate hospitals and for-profit physicians,
nurses, dentists and others participated in a historic catastrophe of
medical irresponsibility that ended up addicting millions of American
workers and their family members and killing hundreds of thousands. A
huge proportion of prescription narcotic addicts are white workers in
poorly protected manual jobs (construction, factories, farms, mines
etc.). They lack access to effective, responsible medical care. In new
millennium America, their jobs would not provide for ‘time off’ or
physical therapy following injury and they unwittingly resorted to the
‘miracle’ of prescription opioids to get back to work. In many cases,
their private medical insurance plans blatantly refused to pay for more
expensive non-addictive alternatives and would insist the workers
receive the cheap opioids instead. The rare worker, who demanded to take
time off to seek effective medical and physical therapy for an injury,
would be fired. US capitalists could easily ignore the growing shortage
of healthy American construction and other workers by importing cheap,
skilled labor from abroad and sanctimoniously blame American workers for
their disabilities.
Conclusion
Workers
in even the poorest European Union countries have greater access to
better, more effective medical care then their US counterparts. They
continue to enjoy rising life expectancies and longer lives without
disability. Their injuries are treated appropriately with rest and
physical therapy. Injured European or Japanese workers are never
prescribed ridiculously long courses of highly addictive narcotics given
to Americans. Certainly any increase in overdose deaths from prescribed
opioids in the European Union or Japan would have generated rapid
public health investigations and corrective action – a marked contrast
to the two decades of callous indifference within the US medical
community that bordered on Social Darwinism considering the working
class identity of most victims. In Europe and Japan, long-term narcotic
therapy is reserved for terminal cancer patients suffering from
intractable pain. It would never have been offered to rural or working
class teenagers for sports injuries – a common practice in the US!
The
European public medical care systems are the product of class struggle
and socially conscious mass movements and political parties that
produced welfare states where improving population health was a central
goal of its social compact. In contrast, the private-for-profit health
system in the US is the shining example of the triumph of capitalism –
the consolidation and further enrichment of capitalist control and the
subordination of labor in each of its phase – from low to high tech
business. In this ultimate triumph of capitalism, the old class struggle
slogans were revised – becoming – Long live the bosses! Early death to the workers!
Private
health care and the drive for higher profits provided enormous benefits
for the pharmaceutical industry, making billionaires out of the owners
and CEOs. This spawned the ‘ultra-philanthropic’ billionaire Sackler family whose Purdue Pharmaceuticals peddled the deadly Oxycontin
to tens of millions of Americans. For profit-hospitals, private medical
practices and rapacious insurance companies all reaped the bounty of
mismanaging a bloated, unaccountable system that has provided the
American worker with an early death by overdose or a shortened life of
despair and disability.
Private
capitalist employers and insurance companies continue to benefit from
the epidemic of pre-mature deaths of their former employees: Pension
costs and health care liabilities are slashed because of the decreasing
life expectancy – Wall Street is jubilant. There will be fewer
communities to educate and protect and this will lower taxes. Cheap
imported replacement workers (educated or trained on their own
societies’ dime) can conventiently be deported or replaced.
It
is undeniable: increasing life expectancy and a decent life free of
disability has disappeared for the American worker. With poor health and
inadequate care, maternal and infant mortality are on the rise
especially in rural and de-industrialized areas.
By
every health and living standard indicator, the history of successful
class struggle led to the implementation of effective national welfare
and health programs. Their societies have reaped benefits for their
citizens that were clearly superior to corrupt boss-worker class
collaboration under private capitalism in the US.
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