Health care: It's the insurance!
I highly recommend the atlantic monthly article on healthcare.
http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/...y-father/7617/
Goldhill shows how the inefficiency is a result of the insurance paradigm.
It's certainly not a "free market" in the Adam Smith sense.
His corrective includes some subsidy for low income people. The key issue is that
providers need to compete, and patients need an incentive to economize.
The price structure is completely opaque in this country. That is not the case in other countries.
In Japan, the bureaucracy publishes a book that tells you the cost of every procedure. Medical procedures can definitely be priced on a marginal cost basis. We let the establishment treat costs like a sacred mystery.
In europe, private clinics post the costs of common procedures on a big sign behind the receptionist.
One idea is that preventive care should be free, possibly tax paid.
The system also has to recognize the difference between treating chronic conditions and "one time" events. One time events can be done on a fee for service basis.
Chronic conditions need some different kind payment paradigm.
I highly recommend the atlantic monthly article on healthcare.
http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/...y-father/7617/
Goldhill shows how the inefficiency is a result of the insurance paradigm.
It's certainly not a "free market" in the Adam Smith sense.
His corrective includes some subsidy for low income people. The key issue is that
providers need to compete, and patients need an incentive to economize.
The price structure is completely opaque in this country. That is not the case in other countries.
In Japan, the bureaucracy publishes a book that tells you the cost of every procedure. Medical procedures can definitely be priced on a marginal cost basis. We let the establishment treat costs like a sacred mystery.
In europe, private clinics post the costs of common procedures on a big sign behind the receptionist.
One idea is that preventive care should be free, possibly tax paid.
The system also has to recognize the difference between treating chronic conditions and "one time" events. One time events can be done on a fee for service basis.
Chronic conditions need some different kind payment paradigm.
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