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Old 09-29-2010, 09:57 PM
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BlueStreak BlueStreak is offline
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Join Date: Oct 2009
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Quote:
Originally Posted by whell View Post
It is not coincidental in my opinion that the government's encroachment in the health care system has coincided with the increased per capita spending in health care. Medicare changed the marketplace in which health care is delivered, and costs have risen exponentially since. It made the marketplace much larger, and created more demand for medicine. Also, the introduction of the HMO following the Health Maintenance Organization act of 1973, created huge demand.

Health care is subject to the same laws of supply and demand as any other commodity: as demand increases and supply remains static or increases more slowly than demand, prices rise.

http://www.nursingcenter.com/library...icle_ID=630811

http://www.nber.org/digest/apr06/w11609.html

"The overall spread of health insurance between 1950 and 1990 may be able to explain at least 40 percent of that period's dramatic rise in real per capita health spending."

What started this? Dramatically rising costs, and the public's clamor to "fix" it. They turned to the same folks to fix it who fueled the increases in per capita spending (and the resultant increase in health insurance costs), and we'll likely get more of the same.
So, I take it that chicken bartering is not the answer?

Dave
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