| mrstickball said: You know, you, nor anyone else that hates the American health care system has bothered answering my question about the 100% free-market system in the US that has costs 60% lower on average for every major surgery and drug, yet provides the same level of quality of care and death as the current heavily-regulated system. You should answer my question about it before spouting that the free market wouldn't apply to drugs available from one manufacturer. Go look at soda pop - every time there is a major new flavor, it is copied significantly because there is no major IP law against coke-rippoffs, but there are for big pharma. |
Welcome to the gotcha that gold-plates America's health care and makes it expensive. Because of laws protecting IP research, companies spend a lot of money on new drugs and procedures, and techonology, which makes the US health care system like a luxury automobile maker. If you were to not offer any IP laws to protect, do you think the medical industry would research as it had? And this is likely part of the reason for costs soaring. When it comes to health, people will spend anything to have what they need to be healthy. Industries will build themselves around this.
The current system in the United States has a bunch of government money flowing into it, combine with neither harsh free market limitations on money, or government oversight to contain costs. So flushed with cash, and no restrictions, the system keeps driving prices up.
Do you think America would have nearly the spending it does in the medical industry if it wasn't profitable to do so?







