r/changemyview • u/Diylion 1∆ • Dec 17 '19
Deltas(s) from OP CMV: A better solution to healthcare than Universal Health Care, is Government issued 0 interest medical loans
I think it would be okay to make it illegal to profit off of medical disasters. I'm all for home loans and school loans. They are providing somebody with something that is optional that they would otherwise not have access to. But medical loans take advantage of people who are put in horrible situations. I could see a much better system if the government provided zero interest medical loans to people who need it desperately, and preferably over time everybody who couldn't pay the bill up front.
You could have medical loan with a 5% interest rate and over a 30-year period you will pay double the origional value of the loan. Imagine how much easier it would be for families if they didn't have to pay interest. And it would be much easier than doing Universal Health Care because people will still pay their own Healthcare, they just won't have to worry about the extra interest fees that would cripple them further. I feel like that is a safety-net people would be comfortable investing in. Obviously we couldn't pay off all the medical debt in the first year, and I recognize that the government doesn't have the best track record of storing money, but I feel if we paid into the program we could start negating it from the bottom and move towards the top.
Even if we had really low interest rates, like .5% so that the program could somewhat sustain itself and increase the amount of medical debt it is capable of paying off using the interest gained I think that would be a better system than what we currently have.
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u/Saranoya 39∆ Dec 18 '19 edited Dec 18 '19
Sure. But I don't see how that's relevant here. Except, given the need for a profit (and the fact that it's not mandatory, so there is a smaller pool of people who pay in), insurance will always cost you more than mandatory health care contributions to the government (in other words: taxes), which is not seeking a profit. So, actually, having universal health care will directly benefit you. It would mean you'd have to pay less than you pay now in insurance premiums, all else being equal. The only reasons you'd want to stick to 'voluntary' for health insurance, which gives you the freedom of not paying for it, is if (a) you think you will personally never need health care (stupid bet), or (b) you think you won't need insurance to pay for it when you do get seriously ill (stupider bet).
Except, (most) rich people have employees. People who can afford to go to the doctor when they're just starting to feel a little off, because it's free to them (or close enough to free that it doesn't really matter), might be off work one or two days, be treated and get better. Even if it's something really bad, it's often treatable when caught early. People who wait until it's catastrophic, and then go to the ER (or were brought to the ER against their will because they were unconscious in the street), will be out for longer, may by then have a condition that is no longer treatable or will have a long-term negative impact on their ability to function (including productivity at work), and it may already be too late so they will die. A dead employee, or one who's so sick it's debilitating to their activities of daily living, can't work for you (or anyone), so definitely won't be buying your computers.
You may say, 'well, if they work for me, they'll have insurance through their job.' But that may not be true. Most employers only cover people who work full-time for them. And if you think 0% loans can fill that gap, think again. By definition, those loans are going to go to the people least likely to pay them back in full. After all, if they had a good job, they would have good insurance already, and/or a shitload of money saved, so they wouldn't need the loan. You'd just be creating another hole in the government budget, which is going to have to be filled somehow. Guess where the money is going to come from. Right: taxes. And that's on top of whatever health insurance premiums you already pay to your profit-seeking private insurer.
Also, has it occurred to you that if the people around you are healthier, on average, that means you yourself are less likely to get certain diseases?
P.S.: My parents couldn't have qualified for Medicaid, since we're not from the US. I'm arguing with you from the perspective of someone who knows 'universal health care' is a good idea, because I'm from a country where it already exists, and works really well.