You're still missing the way the market handles it though. If I go to the ER without insurance, get treated, and then leave without paying up, the costs are figured into future prices for treatment.FEOS wrote:
What I'm saying is that the arguments don't add up.Turquoise wrote:
So you don't think that most of the reason why we pay so much for healthcare is because our system doesn't properly handle people who don't pay up?FEOS wrote:
Because it's not the government's job, nor is it enumerated in the Constitution.
The better comparison was the one used by Obama tonight: public vs private college.
The difference is that the government doesn't (yet) think it can force you to go to college.
As for passing on costs: If the costs were truly passed on to others, there would be no medical debt.
If the costs of those who don't pay get passed on to the rest of us, then there's no debt for that person who doesn't pay. There's no bad credit following them around. There's no collectors trying to get the money from them.
But all that exists, both due to medical bills and (more often) other debts that far exceed the medical debts.
The bottomline is that one must meet certain criteria for the government to force you to carry insurance for your vehicle: 1) you must have a vehicle 2) you must drive it 3) you must have coverage to protect others, not yourself. It's not at all the same paradigm. It's an overly simplistic fucking sound byte that nobody thinks twice about.
Then there's the whole Constitution thing that Obama isn't a fan of anyway (see his comments on positive vs negative rights).
Just because the prices go up doesn't mean that the debt disappears, because that assumption requires everyone else to pay up. Since multiple people go to the ER and don't pay up, the debts never go away. They just add up over time because of the number of people that don't pay up.
The only way said debts can be realistically handled is for the system to have a massive insurance pool to handle these unexpected costs -- which is only possible via taxation.
These taxes would enter an insurance plan that everyone would have to pay into.
So yeah, it does add up, but you're just not doing the math.