There is an
interesting interview with Martin
Shkreli in today’s Financial Times. Shkreli who became famous (or
notorious) when, after purchasing the patent, increased the price of a life-saving
HIV/AIDS drug by 5000% clearly enjoys playing the role of a bad boy. He does
not at all regret his decision and believes that whatever he did was absolutely
correct since it maximized the value for the shareholders. He would, as he says,
do it again.
And there is
an iron logic in Shkreli’s argument. As I argued here
and here,
if there is a capitalist economy, it
does not make sense to believe or to argue that companies should pursue objectives
other than maximization of profits. If society desires to make some adjustments
to that, as it obviously should in this case, then it is incumbent upon the government to either impose market changes (say, to limit the price) or to create a better
system of insurance, or to simply subsidize the users of the drug. But it is
not Shkreli’s duty to incorporate social
concerns in his pricing policy. He
would behave the same regardless of the product he sells: it could be a life-saving
drug, as here, or a pair of shoes: the rules are the same.
In fact, the
only sin of which Shkreli seems to be guilty is to have been brutally frank and not hypocritical. Many companies
(especially big pharmaceuticals) do exactly the same thing that he did, but they do it more discreetly: they may not
jack up the price by 5000% and thus attract unwarranted attention, but they
might jack up the price by 2000% and pass unnoticed, under the radar of the politicians
and opinion makers. They are perhaps shrewder and more careful than Shkreli but
not any different. They pay lip service to caring for the (vaguely
defined) “stake-holders” but they know, as well as Shkreli, that if they do not focus, above everything else, on profits they would be either out of their
jobs, or even out of business (as their companies might fail).
If you have
a capitalist economy, you cannot have it both ways: asking for uncompromising
efficiency, advocating competition and then, suddenly, in some cases, asking capitalists
and entrepreneurs to follow a totally different logic. If you want outcomes to be different, then the government
cannot remain aloof but has to intervene and take an active role.
This reminds
me of a similar story I read many years ago when an American basketball player
(unfortunately, I cannot remember who it was) refused to be drawn into the position
of a role model. He answered the journalist
who criticized him for not being an uplifting model for the kids by pointing out an obvious
fact: his role is to hit the hoops, not to raise other people’s kids. And that’s
clearly the key point: if you want better children and greater parental involvement,
the way to get it is by introducing paid parental leave, or by allowing parents
to come later to work (after they have dropped off their kids) or by giving
child cash benefits, not by keeping everything
unchanged and then pretending that it is the duty of basketball players to make
sure children are raised well.
In other
words, people follow a certain logic of behavior (which reflects dominant
social mores and institutional set-up) and if one wants to change that logic in some instances, one
needs an activist government. For nothing comes for free.
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