| > Well no... Inefficiency is totally independent of equitability. The reason why inefficiency is tied to equitability in the real world is because equitability is enforced, which means you spend resources to achieve it, and that is the successful case of enforcement. i.e. forcing everyone to take insurance to give coverage to the sickest can increase sickness because there is no economical consequence to unhealthiness. > This increase in healthcare expenditure across time has happened in all western countries has it not? No..if it had, we wouldnt be talking about a problem of healthcare in the US. Its grown disproportionately here. But the whole point is that 50-60 years ago, healthcare was cheap and it was private. > You mean how the government has failed to regulate more? How the government has failed to de-privatize certain portions of the American healthcare system? How the government has hamstringed public options (like Medicare) to prevent the american public from realizing how much cheaper the government can provide care than can a private system? Totally agreed! I will be more practical then. What do you think are the top 3 issues that make healthcare expensive? Concretely, not abstractly. What are the 3 things that if didn't happen, healthcare would be much cheaper, and I challenge that all 3 of them are the result of regulation. That is, the government made it expensive. > Did I miss it? Maybe you could post it again here. I'm just looking for what could change your mind. -> > what would change your mind in the general?
> Mine is that lightly regulated free healthcare markets will be efficient (though might not be equitable). |
Now you're switching around your causality. Earlier you said: "inefficiency tends to harm both equitability and value/cost"
So you don't believe that inefficiency causes equitability, just that equitability causes inefficiency?
>No..if it had, we wouldnt be talking about a problem of healthcare in the US. Its grown disproportionately here. But the whole point is that 50-60 years ago, healthcare was cheap and it was private.
So, in response to demographic changes across the western world (like an aging population) a bunch of countries made their systems more public and were able to keep costs down and the US has kept theirs more private and costs have ballooned. Maybe the answer is self-evident.
>I will be more practical then. What do you think are the top 3 issues that make healthcare expensive?
I think there is basically one cause: the existence of for-profit insurance companies. In a public system where government provided healthcare there would be a large monolithic body which could assert it's power to keep prices down. In a market with multiple insurance companies, they'll never have enough individual power to keep prices low. That's how the market is supposed to work by keeping power divided, it's just that healthcare is a terrible place for markets.
>Mine is that lightly regulated free healthcare markets will be efficient (though might not be equitable).
So to get you to change your mind that public systems are better than private equitability never comes into play? What is the point of efficiency if not to help people? If the point of efficiency is to help people then how is equitability not important?