Do I sell my kidney or tell my kid he can't go to college?
Do I sell my liver or live in credit card debt for the rest of my life?
Plus, the illegal gaining and trading of organs would spike.
In Pakistan, 40 percent to 50 percent of the residents of some villages have only one kidney because they have sold the other for a transplant into a wealthy person, probably from another country, said Dr. Farhat Moazam of Pakistan, at a World Health Organization conference. Pakistani donors are offered $2,500 for a kidney but receive only about half of that because middlemen take so much.[33] In Chennai, southern India, poor fishermen and their families sold kidneys after their livelihoods were destroyed by the Indian Ocean tsunami on December 26, 2004. About 100 people, mostly women, sold their kidneys for 40,000–60,000 rupees ($900–$1,350).[34] Thilakavathy Agatheesh, 30, who sold a kidney in May 2005 for 40,000 rupees said, "I used to earn some money selling fish but now the post-surgery stomach cramps prevent me from going to work." Most kidney sellers say that selling their kidney was a mistake.[35]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organ_transplant#Compensated_do...
Besides, I don't understand why anyone finds it so horrifying. We indiscriminately implore people to donate their bone marrow for free, and we applaud those who do. But if they get paid for it, suddenly they are being exploited? And it would have been better if the leukemia patient died?
It's not the selling of organs that I find distasteful, it's the buying of organs. Or more specifically, patients not getting an organ because they can't afford one. That, and middlemen profiting from the organ trade without adding any life-saving value. But both of these things can be prevented by publicly regulating and funding the commercial organ drive.