An economics, investment, trading and policy blog with a focus on Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). We seek the truth, avoid the mainstream and are virulently anti-neoliberalism.
Health care market: if you have the money, you get the care If health care were affordable, there would be very little health insurance, or a health insurance market. It was the failure (unsatisfactory outcome) of the first market that created the second market.
Insurance is the institutionalization of extortion rackets. Middlemen - those who provided no service but take a percentage of every deal - are the foundation of America.
It's the old 'demand creates supply' nonsense as well. As though we can turn up the production to 11 and crank out more health care like a gas turbine electricity plant.
We should do that with the air force. What is the point of having trained pilot. Let's have an insurance market against war and then if there is a war we can just turn up the production to 11 and, voila, instant pilot who can fly fighters in battle.
It's a good example, systems that are critical are not left to the cravings of the "free markets!" and the "invisible hands!" like if it's the solution to everything, we are not talking about trivialities like choosing your last smartphone model.
Turns out health care is critical, both at individual and social level, yet some people thinks it has to be deferred as second class issue unlike the state strong's arms (military, police, executive body).
6 comments:
Why does everyone keep confusing health insurance with health care?
Health care market: if you have the money, you get the care
If health care were affordable, there would be very little health insurance, or a health insurance market. It was the failure (unsatisfactory outcome) of the first market that created the second market.
Insurance is the institutionalization of extortion rackets. Middlemen - those who provided no service but take a percentage of every deal - are the foundation of America.
It's the old 'demand creates supply' nonsense as well. As though we can turn up the production to 11 and crank out more health care like a gas turbine electricity plant.
We should do that with the air force. What is the point of having trained pilot. Let's have an insurance market against war and then if there is a war we can just turn up the production to 11 and, voila, instant pilot who can fly fighters in battle.
War insurer: Just give us your defense budget as premium and we'll protect America. You can count on us.
It's a good example, systems that are critical are not left to the cravings of the "free markets!" and the "invisible hands!" like if it's the solution to everything, we are not talking about trivialities like choosing your last smartphone model.
Turns out health care is critical, both at individual and social level, yet some people thinks it has to be deferred as second class issue unlike the state strong's arms (military, police, executive body).
Talk about the double-standard of liberalism...
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