Jewish World Review Nov. 26, 2003
Thomas Sowell
“Fairness” Fanatics
http://www.NewsAndOpinion.com | Many
people are incensed that other countries pay less for American
medications than Americans
pay because that is "unfair." Of course it is unfair — and all of us
like fairness. But there are many other things
we also like, and often in life one desirable thing must
be weighed against another.
Most of us would prefer to live longer and be healthier, for example,
and various medical products and procedures
enable us to do that. We could make drug
prices "fair" if the government imposed
price controls on both domestic and
international sales.
But you can bet the rent money that this
would lead to a reduced supply of new drugs — and therefore more
suffering and death.
Not all problems have solutions. Often
there are only trade-offs. How much suffering
and how many premature
deaths are you prepared to accept as the price of seeing that Canadians don't
get something for less than Americans
pay?
Pharmaceutical drugs are not the only
things for which fairness can cost more than
it is worth. Politicians are forever trying to make
insurance "fair" — and driving up its costs in the process.
It is illegal in France
for insurance companies to charge different
prices to men and women
for insurance or for annuities. Like many
"fairness" policies, this ignores cost differences.
Men have more automobile
accidents than women and women
live longer than men. This means
that it costs more to insure a man's
life or automobile. This also means
that it will cost an insurance company more
to provide an annuity paying a given amount of
money per year to a woman
because she is going to collect that money for
more years.
In a free market, men
will have to pay more for life insurance or
car insurance and women will have to pay more
for a given annuity. What happens when an insurance company
is forced by law to charge men and women
the same?
The total cost goes up because the financial risks go up. The whole basis of
insurance is assessment of risks. One of the
increased risks that come with unisex
insurance is that it can now make a big
difference whether more women
or more men
buy a given company's insurance policies or
annuities.
When each group is charged according to the costs of its own risks, then
whether more women
or more men
sign up with a given insurance company doesn't
matter. But it matters
when women are subsidizing men
in insurance and vice-versa with annuities.
If a given company finds lots of women
buying its annuities and few buying its insurance policies, it is worse off
than if it was the other way around. And of course the insurance company
has no control over who will choose to buy what.
In short, the overall risk is higher, so the total amount
of money required to cover those higher risks must
be greater than the total amount collected
when women and men
were charged separately.
"Fairness" has a price. There is no free lunch.
The same is true when insurance companies
are forbidden to "discriminate" by
age, race, neighborhood or other factors that create differing costs that
cannot be charged to those who cause these costs because that would upset those
who are preoccupied with fairness.
How many people will be happier to pay more
if their neighbors and friends are also forced to pay more?
Maybe some fairness fanatics. Most of us are not fanatics, however —
and for a good reason. Fanaticism is not free.
It has cost some people their lives.
It is certainly not fair to expect children of poor and poorly educated
parents to meet the same
academic standards, or perhaps even behavioral
standards, in school as children from more
fortunate families. But the cost of accepting lower
standards for poor children can be a lifetime
of lost opportunities for those children to rise out of poverty. That too is a
pretty high price to pay for fairness.
The real sign of a fairness fanatic is not how high a price he is willing to
pay but his utter obliviousness to any need to pay any price. He is
particularly likely to be oblivious when the price is paid by others.