PeterZ wrote:Profits are transparent and gained through a voluntary exchange. What gain do policy makers get? Bureaucrats? The targets of government programs? Those are far less obvious.
The E wrote:So because you know and understand the desire to extract a profit, you are perfectly fine with lives being ruined because of that desire?
How does profit gained by people voluntarily exchanging their savings for a service ruin people? Engaging in more debt than can be supported is a voluntary act.
As for efficiency, the cost of a program is spread over a large population. That is only efficient if that single program serves all the population equally. Given our large and diverse population, government programs tend to be too inflexible to serve the various members of our population. The more flexible the program is made, the smaller the various elements of the population its units serve and the smaller the base over which those additional cost may be spread.
The E wrote:Germany's public health care serves over 80 million people. Do you honestly believe that we are less diverse, statistically speaking, than the american population?
And if it, for some reason, cannot be made to work on a nation-wide basis, why can't it be made to work on a state level?
Germany is the size of Texas. You 80 million are located in an area a tithe the land area of the US. Its easy to concentrate doctors, nurses and medical services for that size of a population located in such a dense conditions. Try to spread out the services provided to areas as parsley populated as many parts of the US. Not the same at all.
Which exacerbates the problem for us, because we would be compelled to participate in programs that do not sufficiently serve the need. This doesn't even consider the way the program meets political goals established by policy makers or is managed by bureaucrats to secure their goals.
The E wrote:And would you say that the US' current health care needs are adequately served by private industry right now? Including the need to get adequate health care to the poor? Is the american population adequately supplied with timely and affordable health care options?
The US had the best healthcare available before the move to government run system. We had doctors available where there were people and didn't need insurance to pay for the healthcare. Enter regulations and all of a sudden at became too expensive for a doctor to run his own practice. he needed all sorts of record keepers and billers and lord knows what just to practice medicine. My father was a doctor since the 60's. The intrusion of government made the US healthcare far less efficient since then.
The E wrote:I would also ask you to provide an answer to this question:
I mean, John Oliver recently bought and then abolished 15 million USD in debt, accumulated by just 9000 people. That's a symptom of something being deeply wrong in your country, that people can be bankrupted without any wrongdoing on their part. And you honestly expect others to believe that this is somehow a better solution than having the government run it?
Do you have any idea what the terms of all that debt were? I doubt you do. When you say abolished, do you mean forgave? Called in collateral to repay a loan in default? Do you mean tossed in the paperwork into his fireplace?
If he is not being sued, then in all likelihood he is calling in debt that is in default. If you can't pay for a loan do not borrow money. If he purchased debt already in default, then he is buying debt from people who already have stopped making payments on their debts. He is in fact helping out the poor sods who made the bad loans to begin with by giving them cash for non performing assets. Now he is trying to realize some value from that investment.
What is so wrong about the practice? People voluntarily exchange goods and services for savings or debt. Used wisely, this is the greatest engine for spreading prosperity the world has ever seen. Yet, like anything involving fallible humans, this can be abused. An not abused just in a predatory way, but because people can make bad decisions.