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by fc417fc802
321 days ago
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> Is it a "good" economy if real GDP is up 4%, the S&P 500 is up 40%, and unemployment is up 10%? In today's US? Debatable, but on the whole probably not. In a hypothetical country with sane health care and social safety net policies? Yes that would be hugely beneficial. The tax base would bear the vast majority of the burden of those displaced from their jobs making it a much more straightforward collective optimization problem. |
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The US spends around 6.8k USD/capita/year on public health care. The UK spends around 4.2k USD/capita/year and France spends around 3.7k.
For general public social spending the numbers are 17.7k for the US, 10.2k for the UK and 13k for France.
(The data is for 2022.)
Though I realise you asked for sane policies. I can't comment on that.
I'm not quite sure why the grandfather commenter talks about unemployment: the US had and has fairly low unemployment in the last few decades. And places like France with their vaunted social safety net have much higher unemployment.