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Does this imply that a state funded health insurance for all will operate at a net loss?
The state isn’t a business. Services don’t lose money, they cost money.
Instead of paying your insurance and having them take a profit out of it before providing the service, you pay taxes and the money goes more directly into the service.
In the same way that the USPS operates at a loss
It uh... actually doesn't.
Yes, of course. Health care generates revenue for health care providers, not the state. For the state it’s just another expense on the balance sheet.
The problem with universal health care is that 70% of expenses go to treat 10% of the population. These are often very sick people near the ends of their lives. Frequently the money doesn’t appreciably improve their health or well-being, it merely provides many expensive (and often painful) treatments that extend their lives.
This is the really ugly side of health care that we don’t like to think about because it involves difficult discussions about quality of life and death. We would much rather not think about these things and instead throw more money at the problem. Unfortunately, medical technology has advanced a lot in these areas and so there is an ever-growing array of treatment options to extend life without restoring quality of life.
They're called taxes, look it up