Government subsidies intended to make goods and services affordable paradoxically lead to higher prices because when third parties pay on behalf of consumers, they become price-insensitive, prompting sellers to raise prices; this pattern, documented by economist Milton Friedman in 1962 as the 'iron law of subsidies,' has been observed across healthcare (Medicare increased costs from 5% to 18% of the economy), education (student loans increased college costs from $400 to $40,000 annually), and housing (government-backed mortgages increased home costs from 2 to 7 times average annual salary).
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Every Program Designed To Make It Affordable Made It More Expensive — The 100 Year Pattern本站添加:
In 1965, the federal government launched Medicare and Medicaid to make healthcare affordable for every American.
Before 1965, healthcare [music] consumed approximately 5% of the American economy.
Today, it consumes 18%. [music] In 1965, the federal government launched the student loan program to make college [music] affordable for every American.
Before 1965, a year of college cost $400.
Today, >> [music] >> it costs $40,000.
In 1977, the federal government expanded [music] the Community Reinvestment Act to make home ownership affordable for every American.
Before the expansion, the average American home cost approximately [music] two times the average annual salary.
Today, it costs approximately seven times the average annual salary.
Same pattern, [music] every single time.
Here is why this keeps happening, and it is not [music] complicated.
When a third party pays for something on your behalf, you stop being price sensitive.
When you stop [music] being price sensitive, the seller raises the price.
When the government then increases the subsidy to cover the higher price, the seller [music] raises it again.
The economist Milton Friedman documented this pattern in 1962, more than 60 [music] years ago.
He called it the iron law of subsidies.
Every subsidy [music] eventually gets absorbed by the seller as a higher price.
The intended [music] beneficiary ends up paying more, not less, because the market adjusts to the new money flowing in.
Healthcare costs more >> [music] >> because Medicare exists.
College costs more because student loans exist.
Housing costs more because government-backed mortgages exist.
This is not a political [music] opinion.
This is 100 years of documented American economic history. [music] And Washington has known about this pattern for at least 60 of those years.
They keep doing it [music] anyway because the program announcement is popular. The price increase comes later.
And by then, nobody remembers who called
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