Where people do have efficient healthcare is where the government nationalizes the whole damn thing and only mandates for healthcare services that are effective while taking advantages of economies of scale. This is not speculative thinking. Look at the damn real world results and the conclusion is inescapable.
Oh yeah because Switzerland doesn't exist, I forgot, I am sorry.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/aroy/2011/04/29/why-switzerland-has-the-worlds-best-health-care-system/Oh yeah I forgot that Switzerland has had less healthcare cost growth than the UK even though the UK has the NHS, but that’s not possible because Switzerland clearly doesn't exist.
Oh and it has a fully private system, but Norway pays more even though the government controls their healthcare.
Not to mention that cost of healthcare in the Swiss system is accelerating less than the OCED median, and accelerating less than that of Canada.
But I'm sorry because obviously free markets don't work, cost controls in a private system don't work, only the government works, clearly.
If this were true then the uninsured would have more efficient healthcare. But they don't. And they don't in China either. Healthcare is not a normal good.
Consider for instance if I was paying for an unconscious loved one to get an MRI out of pocket. Exactly how am I going to control costs here? Shrug and let them die? Travel back in time and encourage the hospital to get another MRI machine? Travel to another hospital which faces the exact same market pressures? Healthcare is made up of a million little "market" interactions like this and in the vast majority of spending I as a consumer am virtually powerless. Consumers in aggregate are virtually powerless. That's why we need to government to act as our collective mechanism.
The uninsured don't have more efficient care because what service they do receive comes from a system that is used to dealing with patients who have insurance, and I never said that the uninsured in America would have more efficient healthcare you attempted to extrapolate to that conclusion based on my premises without taking into account the difference in the markers.
You would control costs by finding the cheapest MRI, those people in China and India didn't let their loved ones die, nor did they go to an expensive MRI, at least in the case of the ones that could afford an MRI scan as the governments don't provide universal coverage I only use this as an example as it is the only market that really has cost cutting forces at work.
Yes in terms of individual interactions you don't make a difference in any kin of market, your sole decision only hurts a company’s profits by a few thousand dollars at most, unless you are a millionaire out there buying yachts. If you create a market where it is possible for the consumer to accurately judge the quality and cost of a procedure, or at least the cost as the quality of healthcare is very hard to judge, then you create a system that will naturally drive costs down due to normal consumer behavior.
Market forces are great where there are channels for them to control costs. Those channels do not exist in healthcare and have never existed in healthcare. Free markets are nice but they don't operate on magic. They have to deliver the results through real life transactions.
Which is why there are proposals to create channels instead of just use the blunt force of monopoly power to crush costs, which is ultimately only a short term solution as it discourages medical innovation that would ultimately lower costs further or develop new treatments or drugs due to the lack of profit in the market. Monopoly power curbs doctors salaries, leading to less qualified doctors and thereby lesser quality healthcare.
The free market is absolutely awful, from a moral perspective, when lives are on the line. Ask any of the dozens of species humans have hunted to extinction. More generally, any evolutionary strategy (which, yes, is the concept that underlies how the free market is supposed to work) is morally unacceptable when you have the opportunity to implement an alternative, and the failure condition is the death of a person, as it is here.
Those strategies only help the winners, not the statistical majority of losers who get to go right ahead and die. I can't really be any clearer about why I don't think healthcare should be a market.
Where the hell are you guys pulling death from? The only thing we are talking about is the ability to decide how much you are going to pay for care through consumer choice! You will get your care in any of the proposal I put forth! I mentioned the government would cover expensive procedures, Ideally, which includes most life threating ones! The cost savings will help the poor more than the rich, who already have enough money to buy all the care they want!
Oh and by the way humans hunted species out of existence before the free market was even a concept in the mind of Adam Smith.
Oh and Singaporeans live longer, have healthier children, pay much much less on healthcare than Americans do.
http://www.american.com/archive/2008/may-june-magazine-contents/the-singapore-modelOne sweet model.