And naturally you make this absolute claim because you've undoubtably lived in more countries than just the United States, right?
As point of reference, I lived in Taiwan for years - they have a national health insurance system, and taxes are comparable if not lower in some situations to the United States.
I have lived in 3 countries with socialized health care system and the public systems were just average to poor, and costing me a lot.
In Germany if you’re mid to high earner, a private insurance can cost you less than half than the public healthcare system and you get much better service. Starting with appointments with specialists, who always give preference to privately insured people.
In this day and age public healthcare system are not efficient and bill the wrong people.
They are mostly payed by young population, between 18 and 65 years old. Specially the highest earners.
However most of the usage comes from 65+ citizens, which are starting to become majority. And also tend to be the ones concentrating the wealth of the country.
These public systems work great when most of the population is young and is paying into the system. But modern western societies are not like that anymore. Wealth is not owned mostly by older people while they barely pay into the system.
Private systems work better because each citizen pays into his old age health coverage during his young years.
> In Germany if you’re mid to high earner, a private insurance can cost you less than half than the public healthcare system and you get much better service. Starting with appointments with specialists, who always give preference to privately insured people.
The solution here is to get rid of private insurance in Germany and only have public. It creates a two class system and private is a terrible choice once you are older, as costs will skyrocket.
Costs when you get older skyrocket, but not your monthly contribution.
You subsidize your own elderly costs by paying slightly more during your younger years. That slightly more is part of the insurance companies Float, which gets invested and is used 30-40 years later to cover your extra costs in old age.
In a public system there’s no float. Everyone pays to cover the costs of the healthcare for that budget year. Which has the consequence that whenever there are population age shifts, the system becomes not sustainable, which is our current situation in Germany.
If everyone (except unemployed) had private health insurance, population age would be non-problem.
So your complaint is that the young subsidize the old in a public system, and your solution is a private system that somehow doesn't raise rates on high risk (older people) and to use the young...to pay for the old?
You also ignore that you can't switch and magically have 30-40 years of float for old people currently receive healthcare, so you have to keep the same system in place until they are gone because insurance companies would instantly go bankrupt under your plan (since they have yet to build a float but have payouts instantly), so now young people subsidize old and have to pay for their non-subsidized future so they will basically have to pay double. Or do you plan just leave old people out of the public system? Pretty nice demographic to just ignore in your plan.
As point of reference, I lived in Taiwan for years - they have a national health insurance system, and taxes are comparable if not lower in some situations to the United States.