GasBandit
Staff member
Oh, everything is complicated, I don't disagree there - if there was a simple way to fix such things, it'd have been done already.If you could explain the step between current fucked up system and competitive market place I might consider it. But so far you've only insisted that market forces are the only way to do it while ignoring all the complications that would entail.
The last few dozen times it's been brought up, I've given some examples of how to get the ball rolling in the right direction. First of all, we have to decouple insurance from health care providers. Make it stop being a medical payment plan, but instead return to being actual insurance, a vouchsafe against catastrophic circumstances, not something that is expected to be the purse for all medical expenses. Get them away from being provided by employers, because most people don't get a choice of who their insurance company is, it's whoever their employer contracts with, so that's another place competition and individual choice is cut out. A possible mid-step solution may be switching employer plans away from insurance into an HSA, and let the employee obtain their own insurance. The insurance company also must not be the "customer" of the health care provider, it needs to all be through the patient, so as to remove opportunities for collusion and to make "in network" be an obsolete concept. As Krisken says, prices need to be publicized up front so that consumers can compare.
The immediate problem most people bring up at this point is that when you're bleeding out on the pavement, you don't have time to compare prices. I'll refer to a previous post at this point -
Let me just throw this idea out there, off the top of my head.
The primary problem, as you point out in an extremely emotional way, is that when a loved one is turning blue or bleeding out, you don't have time to comparison shop. But when you call 911, you aren't calling a specific ambulance or hospital or emergicare company, you're calling a government switchboard. They are the ones who decide which ambulance comes to pick you up. What if they started using a technology that has been around for at least 20 years - the electronic auction? The healthcare providers (or rather their administrators) can submit "bids" as often as they like for the all-inclusive cost of an ambulance trip to the emergency room, and when a call comes in, the dispatcher has an easy interface showing the least expensive bids and their locations. There's no time delay involved because the ambulances were bidding on responding to your emergency, days, even weeks, before your emergency even took place. As companies fail to win bids realize that slightly less money is better than no money, they'll lower their bids for the next emergencies, which will cause the other companies to do the same when they see they're not winning bids, and over a relatively short amount of time, there's a very palpable shrinking effect on the cost of an ambulance ride. This is the kicker - for capitalism to work, there has to be competition. Most of the problems with the price of our medical care has come about as a result of collusion aimed to undermine competition.
Is this idea perfect? No. Is it better than what we have? I think so. Are there even more options, that were not thought of by a layman over the course of a weeknight's sleep? Wouldn't be surprised at all.
But those aren't the debates we're having, either here, or on a national scale. It's locked into "status quo vs single payer," because the people at the top level of this debate have their own axes to grind, and that trickles down through the tribalism. Big Medicine has deep pockets, so they buy one side, and their street-level minions follow along because the OTHER side are headed up by the Ruinous Powers - the socialists, and their every-man-on-the-street followers are just as rabid because not accepting socialism means you want families to die horribly in squalid and abject poverty, you privileged scum.
But the truth is there's more than one way to skin a cat, and it doesn't take much looking at the underlying causes of the problem to find those other ways.
Oh, I know it, I just don't use it, because it sounds too quasireligious/mystic, which feeds into the exact kind of "invisible magical nonsense" argument that detractors are so fond of making. So, when you mock the "invisible hand of the market" as rhetoric against me, you are in fact committing a straw man fallacy - you're arguing against someone else's metaphor to try to disprove me.Do you really not know the term invisible hand of the market? I thought you at least had to know who Adam Smith is to call yourself a Libertarian.
I'm surprised, because it's the prevailing sentiment on how laypeople think medical insurance is supposed to work. "I pay my $250 a month, pound my infant with amoxicillin until it stops sniffling forever because it's paid for."Have literally never heard anybody but you use that phrase. Especially since insurance never covers all of the costs.
"Hidden" is a relative thing. When I buy an airline ticket, the final price is always given to me up front. I don't care how they break up that cost into "hidden fees" at the time, I pay them once and know how much it is I'm paying. Same goes for every car I've ever bought. And in each case, those prices are already as low as they are because I have the option to always, at any moment, say "nope, I'm not paying that, I'm going somewhere else." You'll seldom see a price come down faster than when a car salesman is watching someone put their checkbook back in their pocket.That doesn't stop airfare, automobiles, internet, hotels, banks, ticket vendors, real estate, etc. etc. etc. from having hidden fees. I'm really not seeing how competition forces businesses to be up front about costs.