> In the US, the problem is too much regulation but that regulation comes from different levels like insurance companies, medicare, medicaid, etc.
If only there were a single payer. ;-)
Seriously, there should be single-payer health care. Also, there's the fundamental question of whether you view health care as a political right or as a personal privilege. The free market is very good at serving the privileged, not so great at serving everyone universally, equally. If you're ok with millions of people having little or no health care, that's definitely what you'll get with a totally free market for health care.
The problem is not single payer health care, it's that the single payer that does exist (both medicare and medicaid are single payer) has decided not to increase the amount of money available, not even inflation adjustments, for 15 years.
How good would you feel about your job, even if well-paid initially, after 15 years of no raise. Not even inflation or cost-of-living adjustments.
And would you sell if someone came and offered you money for your customers, knowing they'd get screwed sooner or later?
> it's that the single payer that does exist (both medicare and medicaid are single payer) has decided not to increase the amount of money available
Excuse my ignorance as a non-American, but I don't understand how Medicare and Medicaid can be called "single-payer", even if we bunch both of them together for the sake of the argument. Are certain healthcare providers restricted so as to only accept Medicare and/or Medicaid patients, and cannot by law accept those who are privately insured or would like to pay out of pocket? That is the only context in which I can imagine Medicare/Medicaid being called "single payer".
Single-payer as in the government pays. We have Medicare, Medicaid, and veterans all covered by the government. If a provider wants to serve those markets (old, poor, vets) they have to accept the rates offered by the government.
Single payer in the US simply means the patient doesn't front any money. The doctor/hospital/... just gets the money for medical services rendered directly from insurance (and insurance collects things like a deductible from the patient, not the doctor. Essentially, insurance guarantees payment to the medical provider and deals with all patient financial matters). Medicare and medicaid are single payer.
Things aren't called the same thing everywhere. For example, "single payer" is called "third payer" in Northwest Europe.
Expensive (e.g. expat) insurance tends to be single payer/third payer even though it is 100% private insurance. You just go to a doctor, they help, other than your insurance card, no questions asked.
> Single payer in the US simply means the patient doesn't front any money.
No, that's not what it means.
> The doctor/hospital/... just gets the money for medical services rendered directly from insurance (and insurance collects things like a deductible from the patient, not the doctor. Essentially, insurance guarantees payment to the medical provider and deals with all patient financial matters).
You seem to be describing medical insurance in general, not single payer health care.
Uh, that’s pretty much the definition of single-payer, at least as commonly used.
From Wikipedia:
Single-payer healthcare is a type of universal healthcare in which the costs of essential healthcare for all residents are covered by a single public system (hence "single-payer").
The difference here being the US has a fractured system, with several government systems (but from the same government). Medicare for All would be try single payer.
If only there were a single payer. ;-)
Seriously, there should be single-payer health care. Also, there's the fundamental question of whether you view health care as a political right or as a personal privilege. The free market is very good at serving the privileged, not so great at serving everyone universally, equally. If you're ok with millions of people having little or no health care, that's definitely what you'll get with a totally free market for health care.