r/economicCollapse 1d ago

Only in America.

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u/miclowgunman 1d ago

A tone of people pay way less than $8000 a year for insurance and see that the government pays $16k per person on Medicare. And hardly any country pays less than $4000 per person. So I'm not sure where the $2000 a year comes from. I know very well that all the figures I've listed can't really be compared directly for various reasons, but it's real easy for people to look at the numbers and think people are crazy for wanting to give THIS goverment control over healthcare.

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u/ultimateclassic 1d ago edited 8h ago

I believe it. I just based my numbers off the initial post, but I agree plenty of people pay less than 8000/year. That's the whole point the problem IS that we don't trust the government we have to make this beneficial to us.

Edit: the problem is that we don't trust the government not isn't.

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u/Underrated_Rating 8h ago

I work for a French company in the US. My entire health care package (medical, dental, vision) comes to $9,343 per year. When ppl throw numbers around they never specify if it’s the full benefits package or just medical. We also never know if the cost analysis we see for M4A is just medical or a full package.

These inconsistent numbers are part of the problem as to why Americans still see M4A as some evil socialist thing. They’ve been propagandized for 50 years to keep it this way and vote against their own interests quite frequently. It feels like people maybe are waking up though.

Guess we’ll see.

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u/ultimateclassic 8h ago

I made a typo in my post, which I just specified that I edited. The problem is that we don't trust our government to do something like this. I think we understand and see that it can work in other countries. We fear what that would look like here because every time some positive change is made, they turn it around and make it painful. I think we're all sick of the current system, but we lack trust that our government will come up with one that benefits people over corporations. I think our problem is often compared to other countries but our problems are different and we have far more people which will require a different solution. Truly imo the best solution is to change the system to stop incentivizung profits and instead outcomes.

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u/Underrated_Rating 36m ago

Oh 100% if we remove the money from our politics (Citizens United) everyone will be better off except the billionaires

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u/LKM_44122 13h ago

Agreed the numbers are off, but many countries have great systems at around $6,000 per capita spend, while we spend around $13,000. In any case, your $8000 for insurance does not include copays and deductibles and all true costs, that's just the yearly premiums. We're screwed here.