|
|
|
|
|
by ajross
5135 days ago
|
|
The first paragraph seems weird. Does the fact that bluedanieru used a term in a sense other than economism jargon change the point? It seemed to have a clear meaning to me; I can't even tell if you disagree with it. The second has a straightforward answer: universal health care has been implemented successfully in basically every industrial democracy (including the USA, for people over 65). I'd like one of those, please. The idea that there are first-principles reasons why this "can't work" when it so clearly can and does is just ridiculous. But I see it again and again. It's like libertarians have never been to Canada (or don't have grandparents). |
|
Your advocacy for universal health seems to have two parts:
1. It would be nice for someone else to pay for my health care.
2. Universal health care in other countries is better than what we have in the U.S.
My responses would be:
1. Everyone would like this, but it doesn't make us any better off in aggregate. (If you want to redistribute income, it doesn't have to be done via healthcare).
2. Is debatable. There are trade-offs. Look at wait times in Canada. What about innovation over time. Maybe other countries are free riding off of our innovation. Just because costs aren't as visible don't mean they don't exist.
I'm not against all government intervention into healthcare. But, we should understand why the market is failing and how the government is correcting those failures. That is the only way to make good choices about the trade-offs involved. Otherwise, we are just setting ourselves up for failure in the long run.