Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
COVID-19, socialized medicine and ‘deaths of despair’
COVID-19, socialized medicine and ‘deaths of despair’
Jun 13, 2026 9:57 PM

The American healthcare industry is undergoing a massive stress test known as the coronavirus. For months and years e, analysts will be issuing their opinions about just how well that industry performed under the incredible, sudden surge of the pandemic.

Given the massive influx of stimulus funding for healthcare and programs like Medicare, no one should be surprised about a “barrage” of new lobbying activity and a surge of activism for single payer or universal health care. Getting just ahead of that surge are Angus Deaton and Anne Case, two economics scholars with distinguished careers, with the publication in March of “Deaths of Despair and the Future of Capitalism” (Princeton University Press).

American healthcare, they argue, “is a cancer at the heart of the economy, one that has widely metastasized, bringing down wages, destroying good jobs, and making it harder and harder for state and federal governments to afford what their constituents needs.” It is the most expensive in the world, and delivers the worst es of any advanced nation, they argue.

In Case and Deaton’s view, American healthcare is the Sheriff of Nottingham con game – the rich stealing from the poor – with no Robin Hood in sight. The industry, they claim, “is not very good at promoting health” but delivers vast riches to physicians, panies, medical device manufacturers, health insurers, and hospitals. And all of it protected by a potent lobbying effort in Washington.

Here they are in a brief interview about the book:

Case and Deaton have written a scholarly work, much more sociological than economic in its outlook, and heavy on references to public health data, statistical surveys, and the work of other researchers in the field. The main focus of the book is on the white working class and “the lives that e apart and have lost their structure and significance.” Much of the ground over which Case and Deaton range – the opioid crisis, the unraveling of cultural norms, the anomie and alienation of those left behind by a global economy – has been well trod. They’ve put together an exhaustive summary of the data, in numbing and repetitive detail. For a book with the word “despair” in its title, municated with as about as much pathos as a statistical abstract.

Overall, Case and Deaton are not suggesting that free markets don’t have their place, or haven’t produced immense benefits. But in healthcare, one of the chief villains in their story, they argue that the “social benefits” just aren’t there. “While petition is a good benchmark for much of the economy, where we can rely on the market to produce good es, that is not true for healthcare,” they write. petition does not and cannot deliver socially acceptable healthcare.”

The authors are serious people. Angus Deaton, author of The Great Escape: Health, Wealth, and the Origins of Inequality, won the economics Nobel in 2015 for his work on poverty. Anne Case is the Alexander Stewart 1886 Professor of Economics and Public Affairs Emeritus at Princeton. (See the Acton search page for extensive coverage of Deaton’s work over the years.)

Case and Deaton go into in some detail on the deadly opioid crisis, and the culpability of panies in that ongoing plague, but they say problems in American healthcare go well beyond that.

Health insurance, Case and Deaton say, inordinately consumes personal e whether it is paid by the individual or through the shared cost of an employer plan. “It has often been noted that health insurance is less about protecting your health than protecting your wallet against the healthcare system,” they write. They look at the cost of healthcare as a form of reverse taxation where “squeezing even small amounts out of each of a large number of working people can provide enormous fortunes for the rich who are doing the squeezing. That is what is happening today, and we should stop it.”

To bolster their case, the authors cite the work of economist Kenneth Arrow, who they say concluded that a “laissez-faire solution for medicine is intolerable.” (Read Arrow’s 2010 article “The Economy of Trust” in Acton’s Religion & Libertyquarterly.) More from Case and Deaton:

Arrow’s theorems give a more precise account of the argument made long ago by Adam Smith. It is no accident that Arrow also wrote the key paper on health economics, explaining why a market solution for healthcare would be socially intolerable. Certainly, as market fundamentalists petitive free markets (together with antitrust enforcement) would almost entirely deliver lower prices than those we see today. But health care is not like other services. Patients lack the information that providers possess, which puts us largely in their hands. We are in no position to resist provider-driven overprovision, which can also happen with a garage mechanic, but with less serious consequences.

Their cure? Like good progressives, they advocate for some form of universal healthcare, noting that there are “many options” and models for just how to do that. They concede that “no viable scheme can work pulsion to prevent those who do not need insurance from refusing to pay, nor without cost control, which will cut the es of providers, not all of whom are extremely rich.”

Anyone who witnessed the debate over Obamacare, a thoroughly partisan project, should expect that Case and Deaton will get a lot of push back on their claims. AEI’s Marc Thiessen, in an April 14 Washington Post column titled “Why this pandemic is an indictment of socialized medicine,” says the coronavius raises “the dangerous idea that we should put the government bureaucrats who could not develop tests or stockpile masks, gowns and ventilators in charge of our entire health-care system.” Thiessen:

While the federal government’s pandemic preparedness was sorely lacking, the fact is America’s system of private medicine has left us far better positioned for today’s crisis than other nations. As Scott Gottlieb, missioner of the Food and Drug Administration, explained inan interview, here in the United States, “we’re going to have a better experience [with this pandemic] than a lot of other countries because of how good our system is at delivering critical care.”

To support their indictment of American healthcare, Case and Deaton cite the rankings of the Commonwealth Fund, a New York-based healthcare organization that routinely ranks the United States at or near the bottom.

Theodore Dalrymple, a medical doctor retired from practice, looked at the business paratively ranking the quality of national health care systems in his new book, “False Positive: A Year of Error, Omission and Political Correctness in the New England Journal of Medicine” (Encounter Books, 2019). In particular, he looked at the work of the Commonwealth Fund, whose rankings “ought to make people laugh.” He spends some time talking about his own experience with the UK’s National Health Service. More from Dalrymple:

Curiously also, I have never heard any Western European speak of Britain’s health service with anything other than fear or disgust, despite the Commonwealth Fund’s ranking it first. No one in Western Europe says, when ill, “If only I were in Britain!” Rather, if they are ill in Britain, they do everything to be repatriated if at all possible. They regard the prospect of being treated under the NHS with terror. And oddly enough, the Commonwealth Fund ranks France’s health-care system as next to last overall, worst in administrative efficiency and next to last in equity. This is indeed curious, since everyone I have spoken to in France is satisfied with the health care in their country (which has a very good reputation elsewhere also), however dissatisfied they may be about everything else.

“Deaths of Despair and the Future of Capitalism” will find a receptive audience among progressives in an election year, for all sorts of reasons. The e of the race for the White House will also have a huge bearing on whether another push for socialized medicine is ahead. Former Vice President Joe Biden, the current front runner for the Democratic presidential nomination, has promised a major expansion of government support for healthcare, including a Medicare type public option.

But whoever wins in November, those 2,829 healthcare lobbyists in Washington – by Case and Deaton’s count – are sure to remain very busy.

More here from Case and Deaton in this PBS interview:

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Video: Arthur C. Brooks Outlines The Formula For Happiness
The 2015 Acton Lecture Series continued on January 29th with a presentation by American Enterprise Institute President Arthur C. Brooks, who delivered a great talk on whatreally leads to happiness in life. In an era when Americans are finding less and less satisfaction with their nation while enjoying great pared to much of the rest of the world and overall human history, what can we do to regain our confidence in the American enterprise system that has lifted much of...
You Can’t Separate Stewardship from Economics
As Christians continue toturn their attentionto the intersection of faith and work, it can be easy to dwell on such matters onlyinsofar as theyapplyto ourindividual lives. What is our purpose, ourvocation, and our value? How does God view our work, and how ought we to render it back tohim? What is the source ofour economic action? These questions are important, butthe answers will inevitably point us to a more public (and for some, controversial) context filled with profound questions of...
Explainer: President Obama’s FY2016 Budget
What is the President’s budget? Technically, it’s only a budgetrequest—a proposal telling Congress how much money the President believes should be spent on the various Cabinet-level federal functions, like agriculture, defense, education, etc. (A PDF of the 150 page document can be found here.) Why does the President submit a budget to Congress? The Congressional Budget Act of 1974 requires that the President of the United States submit to Congress, on or before the first Monday in February of each...
How Puritans Became Capitalists
In his book,Heavenly Merchandize, Mark Valeri, professor of church history at Union Presbyterian Seminary, finds that the American economy as we know it emerged from aseries of important shifts in the views of Puritan ministers: IDEAS:You’re saying that the market didn’t rise at the expense of religion, but was enabled by it? VALERI:You need to have a change in your basic understanding of how or where God works in the world before you can envision different economic behaviors as morally...
Affordable Energy Drives Basic Needs in the Developing World
“Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day,” wrote Maimonides. “Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime.” With all due respect to Maimonides, much has happened since the 12th century. Among those changes is inexpensive, plentiful energy which powers refrigeration, which frees a man from the burden of fishing every day and allows him to engage in other worthy pursuits. That is only if the progressive crusade to strand fossil fuels...
Mini-Grants on Free Market Economics
Are you a professor interested in free market principles? Do you know of one? The Acton Institute is offering mini-grants between $1,000-$10,000 for faculty at colleges, universities, and seminaries in the United States and Canada. The purpose of these mini-grants is to enhance the effectiveness in the teaching and scholarship of market economics. In the past, these mini-grants were only available for business and economics faculty at Christian schools, but this year any faculty (in the U.S. and Canada) working...
Samuel Gregg: The Anglosphere As Actor On The World Stage
Samuel Gregg, Acton’s Director of Research, asks whether or not the Anglosphere nations (Britain, Canada, New Zealand, Australia, and the United States) continue to be a viable political force in the world today at the Library of Law and Liberty. Gregg begins with his unique Anglosphere experience: Given that I am of Scottish and English descent, grew up in Australia, did my doctorate in Britain, and now live and work in America, I am about as much a product of...
Federal Court Rules Religious Organizations Can Hire (and Fire) for Religious Reasons
Earlier today a federal appeals court handed down an important ruling that protects the liberties of religious organizations. In the case of Alyce Conlon v. InterVarsity Christian Fellowship/USA, the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit rejected a plaintiff’s attempt to enforce state and federal gender discrimination laws on one of the nation’s largest Christian campus ministries. According to the court opinion, Alyce Conlon worked at InterVarsity Christian Fellowship/USA (IVCF) in Michigan as a spiritual director, involved in...
C.S. Lewis on Vocation in the Economy of Wisdom
In Abraham Kuyper’s newly translated Scholarship, he explores the Christian’s role in the Economy of Wisdom. Addressing students of Free University in Amsterdam, he asks, “What should be the goal of university study and the goal of living and working in the sacred domain of scholarship?” Though he observes certain similarities with other forms of labor — between teacher and farmer, professor and factory worker — and though each vocation is granted by God, Kuyper notes that the scholar is...
A Parable for the Entrepreneur
In this week’s Acton Commentary, “A Parable for the Unemployed,” I provide a brief survey of the biblical view of work, concluding with reference to the parable of the workers in the vineyard in Matthew 20. As I argue, this parable “might just as well be called the parable of the jobless. It teaches us to wait patiently and expectantly for ways that we can be of service to God through serving others.” Or as the Theology of Work mentary...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved