Quote from: Androgynous_Machine on February 11, 2014, 10:45:09 AM
Universal Healthcare isn't the right answer either as those vaunted NHS systems are bankrupting their respective countries as well.
The UK government spends 8% of GDP on healthcare ($3,200 per person) to cover 100% of it's people.
The US government spends 15% of GDP on healthcare ($3,700) per person) to cover about 28% of people.
We spend more per person, even before private insurance (which the majority are on in the US) is factored in. Some estimates are putting it at over $5k per person overall.
The UK
does also have private market based healthcare so that rich people don't have to wait, because god forbid rich people have to deal with what normal people have to deal with.
So, exactly how is an NHS style system not better financially? I am not an efficiency expert, but spending more to cover less people doesn't sound very smart. If you examine European economies you will see the primary cause for problems is not in healthcare or education, but lots of protectionist financial policies without the financial flexibility that a proper central bank or even our federal reserve has.
And yes, it is true that the system of pricing and whatnot is inefficient in the US, and that the entire industry is geared to making things less affordable so they can line their own pockets, Obamacare represents yet another transfer of wealth from people to private corporations, just like byzantine rules for generic medications, and ambulance chasing lawyers do when they drive up malpractice insurance. The solution is to eliminate all profits and therefore eliminate the incentive to write regulations that work as kickbacks for corporations.
Regardless I will never see our system as just or moral so long as people die from not having the money to participate in the healthcare system.