Re: More fun with for-profit medicine
You are making the situation black and white when it obviously is not. Your straw man holds no water in this discussion. You claim that the systems in those countries work "just fine" when they actually do not for a huge majority of people in all systems. It is a matter of tradeoffs. People in Britain, for example, are more likely to be able to see a doctor for most things but are less likely to survive it once they do. Perhaps that has something to do with all the foreign-born doctors? Or perhaps it's systemic--capping the "costs" as you call them (incorrectly) of health care has the same result as putting a price cap on every other good or service. More is demanded and less is supplied. The reason why Britain has systematically worse hospitals and why its health care providers are of lower quality generally is because they have traded off a more efficient system of allocating resources for one that guarantees access--access to poor quality. The Soviets did the same thing but for virtually every aspect of life, thus enabling everyone to have equal access to poverty. There are insufficient incentives to provide truly high quality care under the British or similar systems.
That being said, we here in America have taken the opposite tack. We have sided with insurance companies at the expense of consumers, thereby creating a Byzantine fascist (literal definition of fascist) system.
American, British, Canadian and all other systems so heavily interfered with by government are all about as equally "free market" as each other. Maybe it's time that medicine at large becomes more like the much freer types of medicine--cosmetic surgery.
Originally posted by c1ue
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That being said, we here in America have taken the opposite tack. We have sided with insurance companies at the expense of consumers, thereby creating a Byzantine fascist (literal definition of fascist) system.
American, British, Canadian and all other systems so heavily interfered with by government are all about as equally "free market" as each other. Maybe it's time that medicine at large becomes more like the much freer types of medicine--cosmetic surgery.
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