People often talk about how healthcare was good, but not great, back in the 1960s; and it was affordable. Some doctors still made house calls. They yearn for the good old days. Along these lines, an interesting comparison occurred to me.
Back in 1960 a typical television looked like this.
Just over half the population owned a black & white tube television, and you were lucky if you could get five channels. The TV had no remote, and there was no cable, so you needed an outside antenna or an inside antenna known as "Rabbit Ears". In 1960 an RCA black & white 21 inch console TV cost $268, most people financed this for about $10 a month.
Today the equivalent of $268, adjusted for inflation is about $2400, and here is what you can buy for a little more than half that!
But the costs of medicine and the education moved in the opposite direction. Today we live longer and healthier due to medical advances, but the price has increased faster than inflation. The cost of becoming a medical professional has likewise soared.
One reason for both, ironically, is government interference: low cost insurance on one hand and student loans on the other. This greatly reduced competition. Make it easier for citizens to pay for something, and the people who sell it have no incentive to control costs.
The only way to control cost, any cost, is to focus on the reasons behind the high cost. Politicians are silent about these underlying reasons for soaring healthcare costs, and have made no plans to deal with them. The primary reasons for the high cost of healthcare are summarized below. (A thorough explanation was given back in the spring of 2012.)
- Insurance Design: Insurance companies separate the provider from the patient.
- Innovation: New medical technology and treatments save lives but add cost.
- Lack of open competition.
- Over-testing.
- Billing and coordination issues.
- Regulations and Restrictions: Rules vary from state to state.
- Liability: The high cost of malpractice insurance affects all patients' bills.
- Lax eligibility rules and outright fraud.
Unless someone comes up with a plan and makes a serious effort to address these issues, all the insurance or Medicare-for-all schemes will not succeed. The alternative would be for the government to fix a price on everything and see how many drug companies continue to innovate, how many doctors stay in business and how many students chose to get a medical degree.
But politicians will continue to promise the easy non-solution to give the appearance that they care about fixing the problem.
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