Originally posted by WhatMoney
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Our Government simply doesn't have the money to pay for a national health care system. The numbers reported are not accurate, they never are. The GAO always underreports the cost of programs and overestimates the revenue of the taxes to support the programs.
You posted a nice chart in another thread that showed the various projections without a National Health Care Program. The chart you presented was from Ross Perot's site. It did not include a National Health Care System. By 2049 government spending will take up 55% of the GDP. Almost half of that will be Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. A third will be just interest on the national debt. Current spending is just over 20%. So you are looking at to just maintain current programs taxes will have to more than double in the next 40 years. That is something that is not sustainable.
If you add in the National Health Care system you will reach the same spending level in 1/4 the time and that's a conservative estimate on the spending. The only way to avoid that is to have a draconian process like most European as well as Canada has were it can take months to years to get necessary service, and much like France we'll all still need supplemental private insurance.
The key to lowering health costs in the United States are not federal mandates or NHC. Indeed those increase cost not decrease them. What we need are sensible laws capping lawsuit payouts which is the single largest factor in health care costs. We need to cap the payout from any lawsuit to 30x the annual income of the individual. This would significantly reduce the liability on a doctor's part and thus reduce the cost of liability insurance. Overall it would reduce the cost of medical care in the United States.


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