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Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

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Page 1: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics

Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant

Organs?

Page 2: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

Are some

markets too

repulsive to

consider?

Page 3: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

ewww!!!!

Page 4: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

prostitution

Page 5: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

gambling

Page 6: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

pollution permits

Page 7: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

interest on loans

Page 8: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

ticket scalping

Page 9: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

horse meat

Page 10: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

illicit drugs

Page 11: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

uterus rental

Page 12: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

dwarf-tossing

Page 13: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

selling human organs

Page 14: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

Should We Allow a Market For Transplant Organs?

Or. . .

Brother,

can you spare

a kidney?

Page 15: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

Kidney Transplant Background

• From the first kidney transplant in 1954, both transplants and those seeking transplants have grown over time.

• Transplants• 1990 10,000• 2005 13,700• Most of this increase came from live donors.

Page 16: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

Background. . .

• Waiting list• 1990 17,000• 2006 65,000• Reasons for the increase?

– Technological advance.– Inability of the current system to procure enough

organs.

Page 17: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

Background. . .• In 2004, there were 50,000 on the official

waiting list, but 335,000 on dialysis.

• The median waiting time for people placed on the kidney transplant waiting list is more than 3 years.

• People suffer and die while waiting for a kidney transplant:

• 1990 1,000 people died• 2005 4,000 people died

Page 18: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

Background. . .

• In 2004, 80% of living donors and recipients were related.

• The opportunity to buy and sell kidneys has the potential to save lives and improve the quality of life for many people.

Page 19: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

The Demand for Kidney Transplants Has Grown Faster Than the Supply

Source: Becker and Elias, 2007

Page 20: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

Government mandated price ceiling of $0.

Prohibition places a ceiling price on kidneys.

Page 21: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

20,000 kidneys supplied (donated) at P= $0

How many kidneys are donated at P=$0?

Page 22: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

20,000 kidneys supplied (donated) at P= $0

80,000 kidneys demanded at P= $0

How many kidneys are demanded at P=$0?

Page 23: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

60,000 kidney shortage

What is the shortage, and what caused it?

Page 24: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

What would happen if the ban on kidney sales was lifted?

Page 25: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

Objections to a Market Solution

• Unfair to the poor• Exploitation• Coercion

• Objectification• Illegal (black) markets• Fewer altruistic donors

Page 26: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

Fair to the poor?

– No!• Poor are priced out of the market.• Poor may be “coerced” into selling kidneys.• Poor may not understand the risks.

– Yes!• Is it ethical to deprive the poor of the opportunity

to increase their standard of living – and save lives?

• We allow markets in: blood, hair, and the use of a uterus.

Page 27: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

Coercion and Exploitation?

• Coercion in the absence of monetary compensation?

• Is it coercive to pay people higher wages for more dangerous employment?

“It is an unethical approach to shift the tragedy from those waiting for organs to those exploited into selling them.”

Page 28: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

Objectification?

• Money can transform a “good” deed into a “bad” one.

• Treating the body as a commodity?

“…any procedure which tends to commercialize human organs or to consider them as items of exchange or trade must be considered morally unacceptable, because to use the body as an ‘object’ is to violate the dignity of the human person.” Pope John Paul II, 2000

Page 29: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

Organ theft?

• As opposed to prohibition, a market would make kidneys more available, lowering the price, making theft less profitable.

• A live donor market could virtually eliminate the possibility theft.

• Under prohibition, what is the black market price of a kidney?

Page 30: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

The Black Market price of kidneys?

Page 31: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

Would there be fewer altruistic donors?

S

Page 32: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

Public campaign to increase altruistic donations?

S

Page 33: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

If it is obvious that a market would save lives, why don’t we allow it?

Agent Action Consequences

Page 34: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

Ethical Theories

• Outcomes-Based: Right Consequences• It’s results that matter.

• Duty-Based: Right Action• Proscribed ethical principles.

• Virtue-Based: Right Agent• Intentions and personal virtues matter.

Page 35: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

Policy Options

• Current voluntary system

• Free market

• Regulated market

• Communitarian approach

Page 36: Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 7: Should We Allow a Market for Transplant Organs?

Further Reading• Becker and Elias, “Introducing Incentives in the Market

for Live and Cadaveric Organ Donations, Journal of Economic Perspectives 21(3), Summer 2007, p.2-24

• Howard, “Producing Organ Donors,” Journal of Economic Perspectives 21(3), Summer 2007, p. 25-36.

• Roth, “Repugnance as a Constraint on Markets,” Journal of Economic Perspectives 21(3), Summer 2007, p. 37-58.

• http://freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/11/13/kidneys-for-sale/#more-2089