J
James Arthur
Guest
Bob Larter wrote:
(Assuming the numbers aren't just outright lies, which one
finds they often are in this particular controversy.)
favored constituents.
If I were sarcastic I might point out the current incentives have
spawned a giant industry that _depends_ on the waste. (Another
bubble.)
The waste, and spreading of it, is a false prosperity, but it's
bigger than the car companies. If today's doublethinkers are
consistent, fraud and waste should be preserved and expanded,
because too many jobs depend on them--they're "too big to
fail."
Cheers,
James Arthur
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Spread the Waste!"
Only half of that is government spending, half is private.James Arthur wrote:
Bob Larter wrote:
James Arthur wrote:
Eeyore wrote:
bill.sloman@ieee.org wrote:
On May 3, 7:51 am, James Arthur <bogusabd...@verizon.net> wrote:
Eeyore wrote:
Expenditures in the United States on health care surpassed $2
trillion in
2006 ... In 2006, U.S. health care spending was about $7,026 per
resident and
accounted for 16% of the nations Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
http://www.kaiseredu.org/topics_im.asp?imID=1&parentID=61&id=358
NHS Spending 2005-06: Ł87.2bn
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/1935730.stm
That's ~ $ 2034 per resident.
That's a projection, from 2002. Any idea what the actual UK outlay
was?
UK helath spending has sat around 5% of GDP for quite some time now
and its seems unlikely that this has changed recently.
Indeed, see my reply which showed that actual spending fell BELOW
the estimate !
In comparison, US spending is IIRC some 15-16% of GDP typically.
Graham
Your first link, from 2002, says
"The effect of these increases will mean that the
proportion of national income spent on the NHS
will rise from 7.7% now to 8.7% in 2005-06 and
9.4% in 2007-08."
Since spending is certain and income is not, it'd
be interesting to see what the actual figures are today.
I followed some of the links from that article to several
others portraying the UK system rather negatively; I'm
not swayed by that--it looks like the same treatment the
media gives our situation.
Our system could certainly be more efficient, it's just
that the government has removed all such incentive. It's
been open-looped, and the cash they pump in just drives
it further toward the rails.
Then the logical thing to do would be to close the loop, as it is in
other countries that have universal health care, run by the government.
You don't understand our government. These are the geniuses
who built the global financial crisis. They _already_ spend ~8%
of our GDP on healthcare;
16%, according to all the figures I've seen.
(Assuming the numbers aren't just outright lies, which one
finds they often are in this particular controversy.)
You're confused about the object of the new plan, which is to rewardwhat they propose is to spend even
more.
Assuming they get it right, it would actually *decrease* health spending
as a percentage of GDP. No more money spent on insurance company
bureaucrats whose job it is to deny claims, hospital management who
aren't terrified of being sued, lower malpractice insurance, cheaper
tests, etc.
Socialized medicine isn't a panacea--just putting money into
a common pot doesn't guarantee a thing will work. It's your
system of rules, payments, and customs that does that.
Very true. Fortunately, there are plenty of successful 'socialised'
healthcare systems that the USA could simply copy, to great benefit. Why
reinvent the wheel? The French or Australian systems (which both include
paid private health cover as well as the free public cover) would be
good models for the USA.
favored constituents.
If I were sarcastic I might point out the current incentives have
spawned a giant industry that _depends_ on the waste. (Another
bubble.)
The waste, and spreading of it, is a false prosperity, but it's
bigger than the car companies. If today's doublethinkers are
consistent, fraud and waste should be preserved and expanded,
because too many jobs depend on them--they're "too big to
fail."
Cheers,
James Arthur
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Spread the Waste!"