Rynar wrote:
Again, you don't have nearly enough data to analyze the best way to administer universal healthcare, public or private, even if we only examine the problem as it exists right this very second, making no consideration of future issues that may arise. Any time you only do something one way, you have no way of knowing if it's the right way, and when that happens it almost always means it isn't. This is an awful thing when you're talking about willfully mismanaging about a third of the economy.
I'd love to know how universal private healthcare can work out even in theory. If you're talking about the government subsidizing private industry, well that's what Obamacare is. If you're talking about the government not being involved.....that just doesn't work.
The fact is, fully private health care is pretty much guaranteed to be a huge drop in the quality of care for a very simple reason: Our current health services are financed via massive borrowing. A for-profit private health care system can't be built on borrowed money. The vast majority of the population can't actually afford a 79-year life expectancy. Today, we have a system where people retire at age 65 and continue living past age 85, doing nothing productive for over 20 years. Do you know how much that costs? Medicare borrows two thirds of its budget. Very, very few seniors can afford anything else besides Medicare because the actual costs of health care in old age are just that immense. Even if privatization results in an absolutely massive increase in efficiency, it's still not likely to provide the same level of care we get now. The average cost of providing medical care for a 65 year old until death is now over $1.25 million. How many people retire with $1.25 million? Hell, how many people retire with even $500,000, let alone $500,000 to spend on health care?
Even if a theoretical private enterprise can provide the same quality of care for half the price as Medicare, it's still a huge step back in overall quality.
If you want the life expectancy in the US to be over 70, you must "rob the rich." There's no way around it. If you put this burden on the individual, you are basically telling the population that you need to be a millionaire if you want to expect to live to 75, and if you want to live to 85 you better have more than $5 million.