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by entee
2513 days ago
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And what if you happened to not be able to save? Or if something was too expensive for your savings? Or if you chose the wrong savings vehicle and the stock market tanked just when you needed that new hip? How much should you save? How do you know? Pre-WW2 America isn't a place most people would want to return to in terms of healthcare. It was far far less advanced, people died much more easily and you may recall a certain Great Depression which made it so those savings weren't quite as reliable as people hoped. Oh and when you go to the ER after getting hit by a bus, are you going to call around for the best deal? You might argue that's what insurance is for, but now you end up back where we are today, with a middle-man paying for things. Things that are essentially guaranteed to happen but unpredictable in their magnitude. I'm not saying we shouldn't have more market information, but it's just incorrect to say the market will solve this. Serious medical problems are a, "your money or your life" situation, pure unregulated markets are going to really struggle in this area. |
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I dunno, the differences weren't huge, and at least people didn't go bankrupt (data not from the US, but close).
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2625386/
"Life expectancy of mature women taken from Hollingsworth8 and OPCS data for England and Wales
Date Life expectancy of women at 15 years (years)
1480–1679 48.2
1680–1779 56.6
1780–1879 64.6
1891 61.6
1901 62.6
1911 66.4
1921 68.1
1951 73.4
1961 75.7
1971 76.8
1981 78.0"
1989 79.2