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by t0mpr1c3 19 days ago
Incomes are sharply more unequal. Yes, tech professionals earn more in the USA. Plenty of people flip burgers or cut lawns, and 25 million or so can't afford health insurance.

If you take any kind of look at disparities in health outcomes, it becomes immediately apparent who is dragging down the mortality statistics. This is not something espresso-drinking researchers at WHO dreamed up to fight a culture war.

1 comments

I'm not making an assessment of which economy or system is better. I'm saying that the modal American HN commenter would probably be significantly worse off financially in the UK NHS than on their own insurance, even factoring in how expensive insurance is.
Yes, probably. There are plenty of comments here along the lines of "I have health insurance and lots of money, healthcare in the USA is fine".
And those comments are correct for the vast majority of American households, which is why the status quo remains.
25 million Americans have no health insurance. Most rich nations would consider that unacceptable, and do something about it.
That's true, and it is, but people's inability to be clear-eyed about the politics and the incentives are a big part of why we're locked in this situation. Proponents of payer-side reform are, from the perspective of a huge number of Americans, selling a bill of goods. Ordinary PMC suburban households will very likely be materially worse off.
We have done a number of things about it, most of which are more expensive and less effective than the very simple option of just adding them to Medicare, but expecting people to change from what they know and like to benefit less than 10% of the population is not a winning strategy.
Medicare shares almost the problems of the private system and adds others. The current Medicare scheme, of single-payer health care for the cohort most in need of health services, makes a lot of sense.