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by cwan
5960 days ago
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I have no problems paying taxes - but let's not be disingenuous about it claiming that they are forcing the young to pay for insurance for their own good. If we need taxes to pay for services of the elderly, then let's call it like it is. The screwed up part of the system is that the idea used to be that you'd pay into the system with an expectation that you would eventually get the same services as you got older - but have you even looked at the actuarial tables lately? Practically ever western country has massive unfunded liabilities especially as the baby boomers retire. Personally I like Megan McArdle's solution - let people buy catastrophic loss insurance and fund the rest out of your own pockets. The premiums would be relatively minimal - but the idea that we have to have the government provide insurance / or that even what's proposed in the current legislation solves this problem is frankly nuts. I find it absolutely bizarre that as a Canadian, that while the US government spends more per capita on publicly funded Medicare/Medicaid than Canadians do, coverage for Americans is spotty at best - and you want the US government to get even more involved in healthcare through regulation and direct interventions? |
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I'm not saying I have an answer, but we need to address the real question previous generations never had to face before, which is how much burden do we want to put onto the younger generation to take care of the older one when there are so much fewer young people? At what point do you say "The cost to keep Grandma alive another 6 months costs too much."?