namelessfly wrote:Withfew exceptions, the only people who had no insurance at all were illegal aliens. That could have been remedied by a card check system with enhanced penalties for employers combined with a liberalized work visa system. If Pedro has no job, Pedro deports himself. Problem solved.
Do you have a cite for this? Because based on the statistics I've seen, this doesn't seem to be the case.
For example,
this site places the number of uninsured at 49 million, and the number of illegal immigrants at about 11 million. That leaves 38 million US citizens without insurance, over 10% of your population.
In addition, according to [url=http://kff.org/report-section/the-uninsured-a-primer-2013-tables-and-data-notes/[/url]this source), noncitizens (it doesn't distinguish between legal and illegal residents) comprise only about 20% of the uninsured.
Furthermore, while a [url=http://kaiserfamilyfoundation.files.wordpress.com/2013/11/7451-09-figure-8.png]breakdown of the percentage of people without coverage by state[/url] does indeed show the southern states have high uninsured rates, there are also high rates in states which I wouldn't expect to have a significant illegal immigrant population (e.g. Wyoming or Alaska).
These figures do not include the uninsured, or else people who had to make drastic choices to be able to afford medical care (e.g. bankruptcy or divorce*)
*I can't find the article right now, but I remember reading accounts of people who were forced to divorce in order to qualify for public health insurance when a child got sick.
Daryl wrote:my top level family insurance costs me $250 AUD a month.
This pays for everything that may come up except for the first $300 per year hospital and $6 a pop for prescription drugs.
Statistically the old US system seemed to be very expensive compared to those in other developed countries. Unfortunately it appears that the new one will be similar in ineffectiveness.
For another comparison point, you can get top level insurance for ~90 NIS/adult (about $25) per month, which includes hospitalization, although it still includes (~$6) co-pays for specialists (the total co-pay per family is capped quarterly, though); many drugs are subsidized, although the out-of-pocket-cost varies.
If you want really top-flight insurance, you can get it for maybe 2-300 USD, IINM (unless you need insurance for extreme sports or the like, which is more expensive).