quote author=mainiac link=topic=105423.msg3143823#msg3143823 date=1333111324]
Switzerland does exist. They just don't do a great job controlling healthcare costs:
http://www.who.int/countries/che/en/
http://www.who.int/countries/gbr/en/
AFAIK they spend the second most per capita.
If we are talking about a comparison to England that because the Swiss GDP per capita is 7,000$ higher at PPP per person than English GDP. Richer people spend more on healthcare than poorer people do. Switzerland's Healthcare costs are inflating at a slower rate than GB, as you can see in Forbes if you didn't just shoot the messenger.
https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/uk.htmlhttps://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/sz.htmlOh and Luxembourg and Norway spend more per capita, WHO has data on that too.
http://apps.who.int/ghodata/?vid=1901And the Singapore model is government health insurance! The government sets the prices. The government provides the funding. It's not strictly single payer but it resembles it very much.
As I said before if you look at the actual data the conclusions are inescapable. But if you are getting your information from Forbes then you have only yourself to blame.
No it's a government mandated savings account, which since it is only your own savings account is not insurance. The government sets the prices much, much less than countries with socialized medicine or single payer do. The government mandates
YOU fund your savings account, and only tops off the savings accounts of the population when it comes to catastrophic care and 10% of the population for primary care. It is not a single payer system, as there is no insurance system it is based off a savings account.
This system allows consumers to drive costs controls. The government publishes the price of common medical services and you take a look at the common price, and then find the hospital that offers the best mixture of quality and price. You are not insulated from the costs of your decisions because it comes out of your medical savings account. However if you have a heart attack the price of care doesn't matter because the government will cover that. That doesn't reduce the cost of catastrophic care but it puts great down-ward pressure on the price of primary care.
If you look at the actual
data Singapore has one of the best healthcare systems in the world, as the World Bank summarized much more elegantly than I could:
"The World Bank, in a paper assessing Singapore’s health system, says the results of 3M, with its supplementary programs to protect the poor and to address potential market failures in health financing, “have been impressive, with excellent health outcomes, low costs and full consumer choice of providers and quality of care.”
http://www.american.com/archive/2008/may-june-magazine-contents/the-singapore-modelSorry about the tone in the last post, you just sounded so patronizing I couldn't help but be sarcastic.
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