If we did those two things we'd solve a lot of our problems and pay off our national debt.
Most of the analyses I've read say #2 wouldn't achieve that objective, not by a longshot. The idea that we could retire the level of debt contemplated in Obama's proposed budgets by imposing higher taxes on only 5% of our citizens is wishful thinking at best, particularly as the baby boom generation starts leaving the work force in significant numbers (not me, mind you - I can't afford to).
As a fellow physician, I want as many people as possible to have access to the best care possible. I'm not yet convinced that single payer is a feasible means to that end, let alone the best means. Putting in a few simple rules to make cherry-picking by insurance companies less profitable and to require insurance companies to resume community rating would go a long way. Having practiced in a fully government-run healthcare system at one time, I'm not too sanguine about the 'benefits' of single payer. A look at our current VA system should be enough to give one pause.
Well, we were paying down our national debt w/ budget surpluses under Clinton. I think 2013 (which is right around the corner) was the projected date for the debt to be paid off.
However, we elected George Bush and he lowered the highest marginal rate for the rich and look what happened. Despite him trying to hide the war from the books, we still had high deficits and now we are in more debt than where we started.
Raising the highest marginal tax rate WILL eliminate our budget deficits and our national debt. It's not a matter of if but a matter of by how much you need to raise the top marginal tax rate. Obama's issue is that he just doesn't raise it enough. Basically, he doesn't want to take the political heat. However, we are fighting two wars, in a huge financial crisis, and exporting our manufacturing base overseas. In other times in history (Pre-Reagan), when we are under as much duress we raised the top marginal tax rates as high as 90%. Just google it. Basically, things got paid for. However, w/ Reaganism we ushered in the "greed is good" thing and decided the to 5% of income earners should be able to keep most of their money. I can understand the sentiment but the result is the inability to balance the budget and take care of old people and national defense at the same time.
So, you either have to raise the top marginal tax rate, tell seniors citizens to suffer, slash national defense or live on the borrowed dollar. The only other way is to "grow our way out it" but that has proven vis a vis Reagan and the Bushes NOT to work.
The folks that disagree are from the CATO institute and the Heritage foundation. Both of these are funded by rich people to say what they want them to say. No coincidence or surprise there.
Google highest marginal tax rate over last 100 years and look at hte graphs. Our slipping into massive debt really started w/ Reagan and that's when our the highest marginal tax rate was taken down.
Our financial crisis mirrors that of the 20's and the depression, and look what they did w/ the highest marginal tax rates in the 20's. It's the same thing.
I love capitalism but it's function is to funnel wealth to the rich, there's no two ways about that. It's just the pure and simple truth. The goal of a progressive tax structure is to remedy the ills that befall a society when too few own and control too much.
That's why high marginal tax rates work. Basically, they improve the overall economic health of a country by putting money back in more people's hands.
As for health care, I'd vote for a single payer system but I'd settle for a hybrid system of public/private insurance.
I agree with you, we need to eliminate "pre-existing conditions" and health status as a means for health insurance companies to cherry pick the best cases. We also need a public health insurance option.
As for the "single payer doesn't work" canard....well...that just doesn't hew to the facts.
The US system has the highest per capita health costs in the world compared to any other country. Our privatized for-profit system just plainly doesn't work very well. The systems w/ a large government component in country after country, large and small, rich or not, are just more efficient. The $$$ numbers don't lie.
Now, you may have good reason not to want to practice medicine in a NHS type system. I don't begrudge you. Myself, I like owning my own business.
However, you can't say they aren't more efficient and cost effective than what we have.
As for quality and wait times go, that varies and is largely a function of how much money you put in the system.
However, japan has a gov't based system and their wait times are less than ours and their imaging (mri's and ct's) exceed ours. However, they addressed this by just making mri tests cheaper as just one example.
The big issue for docs in gov't systems as opposed to ours is that although you can make a good living the top end incomes are not nearly as accessible as in the U.S.
But as for U.S. primary care (IM, peds, FP and so on) we don't really do that much better than in some other countries.
I don't think it's good policy to basically give less care for more $$$ per capita just to preserve incomes of subspecialist surgeons, drug, and insurance companies. Because that's what it basically boils down to.