It doesn't matter. I was just guessing at why there is a higher percentage of bankruptcies in a place where the government controlls health care.
The first place to look is what the consequences for bankruptcy, I suspect.
It doesn't matter. I was just guessing at why there is a higher percentage of bankruptcies in a place where the government controlls health care.
Two common themes I have heard from the right on fixing health care is tort reform and competition by the private sector...Not sure if Romney has signed on to that though.
Do you mean: a) the percentage of bankruptices that are medical-cost related among all bankruptcies filed in the two countries; b) the percentage of medical-cost bankruptcies on a strict per-capita basis; or c) some other thing?
I'm all for adding options. As long as they support coverage for those with pre-existing conditions.
Two common themes I have heard from the right on fixing health care is tort reform and competition by the private sector...Not sure if Romney has signed on to that though.
Absolutely. I am also fine with someone paying someone elses insurance. For example if I want to pay insurance for my daughters while they go thru college why in the hell is that anyones business? Why should I not be able to? So I am a fan of the age 26 under parent sinsurance thing. I think age limits should be removed entirely.
This is the kind of healthy discussion we need to have in this country. We need to decide what we want, what won't work, and make it happen.
I agree. The problem is that nothing is about fixing problems anymore. It is all about political points. It is more about forcing your way on everyone (both sides are equally guilty in this). no discussion and no comprmoise = no real solutions.
Health care should not purchased with a tax increase on middle class families (October 4, 2008).
I don't know about you but I don't want the government "fixing" problems. I want them to get the hell out of the way so we can fix our own damn problems.
My guess is that it will further divide the country. If the Feds can force us to buy HC now, what can't they force us to buy?
Absolutely. I am also fine with someone paying someone elses insurance. For example if I want to pay insurance for my daughters while they go thru college why in the hell is that anyones business? Why should I not be able to? So I am a fan of the age 26 under parent sinsurance thing. I think age limits should be removed entirely.
Personal bankruptcy filings as a percentage of the population were 0.20 percent in the United States during 2006 and 0.27 percent in 2007. In Canada, the numbers are 0.30 percent in both 2006 and 2007. The data are from government sources and defined in similar ways for both countries and cover the time period after the legal reforms to U.S. bankruptcy laws in 2005 and before the onset of the 2008 economic recession.
https://american.com/archive/2009/august/the-medical-bankruptcy-myth
There is already private-sector competition. No major market has just one health insurer, and very few small markets do.
So that was three, some other wholly unrelated thing.
So in a critical reading test, you do understand that this is not the same point you were making earlier right?
You've stated that personal bankruptcy rates in Canada are higher. Ok. That has nothing to do with what percentage of personal bankruptcies are caused by medical expenses in either country. In fact the article you link to declares the medical bankruptcy problem to be a myth but then pivots to talking about bankruptcy rates generally, so it doesn't support the point you were originally trying to make at all.
In fact, if you go further into the article it states that 15% of Canadian bankruptcies are primarily attributable to "medical reasons (including uninsured expenses)." Estimates of the percentage of bankruptcies that are primarily the result of medical costs in the United States vary widely, but you have to really play hard and strict to get numbers that low for the United States. Most studies with reasonable definitions of attributability land somewhere between 45 and 60% (personally I agree that the Elizabeth Warren study is a bit high, but that's largely because of the states they selected for the study).
An interesting note on this is the states ability to opt out of the medicaid expansion. Not sure how I feel about that.
You act as though it is all voluntary, and that parents want to pay for their adult children's medical insurance with higher premiums, and that employees aren't going to drop insurance coverage altogether.