You still haven't actually laid out a metric showing that Medicare is inefficient; you just keep asserting it is not efficient in the face of evidence that single-payer systems are in fact pretty efficient. To add more evidence to the "you are incorrect and single-payer systems are in fact pretty efficient" pile, here's another potential efficiency metric we could compare: Medicare spends significantly less (approximate 1.4%) on overhead costs, compared to private insurers that average around 12.4%.[1]
So, again: the US as a whole, using a primarily market-based healthcare system, spends more money per capita for worse results than most other developed nations, most of which are using single-payer systems. Within the American healthcare system, there is a limited single-payer system that only covers a particularly high-risk patient population, and yet despite that patient population, runs more efficiently as an organization than the market alternatives. What evidence are you offering to make the argument that that limited single-payer system is actually more inefficient than the private alternatives?
> You still haven't actually laid out a metric showing that Medicare is inefficient; you just keep asserting it is not efficient in the face of evidence that single-payer systems are in fact pretty efficient
Medicare is an example of a government run healthcare service in the US. Its way more relevant to compare to Medicare than to compare with foreign countries health results. Its also revelant because single payer proposals in the US are basically expanding Medicare. So even if every single single-payer system in the world were efficient, if Medicare isnt, it wouldn't matter.
> Medicare spends significantly less (approximate 1.4%) on overhead costs, compared to private insurers that average around 12.4%.[1]
Sure, thats because it doesn't do price-fighting like private providers have to with insurance companies. It has the basic incentive to cede at every corner as an institution. But lets look at other reasons why healthcare is spending and how medicare solves them. How about pharma costs, doctor salary costs and legal costs. Is medicare cheaper on these other predominant reasons why healthcare is expensive?
You will find that Bernie sanders understands well that pharma is expensive because government restricts its importation. So if as an organization the government is strained to even bring drugs from abroad, a problem it has unique power and responsibility to solve today and no-one else can do except for 'retail smuggling', and we are supposed to put our entire faith into the same hands that cant solve that?
If you just eliminated restriction of drug importation, you would drop healthcare costs enormously in 24 hours. The only thing you have to do as a government, is to stop doing a thing. How simpler can it be.
The core idea here is that the debate of public vs private is a red herring. Healthcare is not expensive in the us because of private vs public. Its expensive for its own particular policies, which economists have consensus on and are hard to take on due to lobbying, or lack of public interest, or mere gubernamental complexity. The topic is presented as two black bentos, where you can only see the results in the faces of people eating them. But they really aren't. You can see what each has and why.
So, again: the US as a whole, using a primarily market-based healthcare system, spends more money per capita for worse results than most other developed nations, most of which are using single-payer systems. Within the American healthcare system, there is a limited single-payer system that only covers a particularly high-risk patient population, and yet despite that patient population, runs more efficiently as an organization than the market alternatives. What evidence are you offering to make the argument that that limited single-payer system is actually more inefficient than the private alternatives?
[1]: http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2017/sep/...