Anyway, Canada is a true Single Payer system (also Taiwan).
Also most of the EU.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/25/Universal_health_care.svg/863px-Universal_health_care.svg.png
What I said I meant. It is justified elsewhere, but if you're happy with Wiki:
Only Canada and Taiwan have true nation-wide single-payer systems.[2]
...and how that squares with whoever it was who said Canada
wasn't Single-Payer, I don't know. (So left that uncommented at, but sounded sorta similar to the way the UK isn't.)
This is an entirely awful way of presenting information and I hate it. It hate it.
There are big problems with it (neither axis is zero-rooted, one has to assume what the unlabelled cost figure represents, there is no actual 'standard' conversion rate from one scale to the other save what one chooses and change the scales/offsets and the gradients can all be made positive/all negative, and without
every country represented we can't be sure that the US is not just the "worst of the absolute best" like Norway would appear if one excluded the US and rescaled accordingly... does that cover it all, or did I miss something?
) but it demonstrates useful things like the fact that the apparently pilloried "wasteful" NHS, in the UK, may or may not be imperfect (there are problems, and arguments rage over whether it is due to too little oversight or too much) but it clearly does better in cost-benefit ratio (if raw LE is considered a benefit) than yonder colonials at the lower latitudes...
(aside: hate the phrasing "10 times less". Consider what "1 time less" could possibly mean, as to why... (Never mind whether it should be "fewer", which is a different issue of pedantry on some occasions!) But please don't let this distract you.)
Since the quote was "Canada has 10 times less population", shouldn't it be Fewer only if Canada has more than one population, and since it only has one population Less is correct because it measures the amount of that population? Sort of like the difference between "I'd like less sauce on my taters please" and "I'd like fewer sauces with my taters please".
Ay, hence "on some occasions". Specifically, I'd have said "...fewer members of population" or just "...fewer people" to get "fewer" in here, but given the nonsensicality of the phrasing (Pop
US=X, therefore Pop
Can=Pop
US-(10xPop
US)=-9xPop
US?) I thought it worth noting the usual
next pitfall.
"Canada has a tenth of the population" works Ok, though. It is a simpler description and doesn't trigger questions such as "ten more 'lessnesses' than
what?", like "OtherCountry has XYZ less people than the US, Canada has ten times [the figure XYZ] deficit to the population than the US". Or, left without any XYZ to work with, "there are ten times fewer people in Canada than in thd US" sends the brain in a direction
other than the more correct "there are 90% fewer people in Canada..." and
only self-corrects because the possibility of a negative population figure (even for poor, desolate Canada!) is a nonsensical notion.
But "we had ten times less profit than RivalCompany" would easily allow for misunderstanding/misconveying of precise information that does not have a glass floor to clue one in on. Which has (if you care to count the inherent ambiguities) at least
four alternate relationships with the (unstated) comparison figure, and probably even more. (Even "a third as much less again" is less problematic, if colloquial.)
...Yeah, I was distracted.
For which I apologise, but (as you can tell) I was distracted first. With just enough wit to keep it as an aside in the first instance, but not enough to realise that I might have then added in a misunderstandable counterpoint argument (the less/fewer one) even whilst I was attempting to get that exact future discussion quickly disposed of
before it even became an additional talking point. Oh well...
On with the show!
"What Muslim ban?" Whoops!