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Notes -
I think this is getting at what I mentioned as "the confounding factor of people wanting to use it to transfer incomes or the sheer constitutional (little c) inability of folks to allow people to make choices with prices". I have two thoughts.
First, I'm not sure that fixing that would fix the other irrationalities I mentioned. Regardless of how you pay for it, questions like whether doctors' prescriptions are sacrosanct or whether they're actually dumb and bad will persist, for example. In the comment I linked to, the question of whether doctors should play a gatekeeping role is one that we've sort of stumbled into, via unintended consequences, rather than being a rational, clear, and vision/purpose-driven choice.
Second, I would say that people "want" this for literally everything. Of course people want world-class, free/cheap food provided to them, paid for by someone else. Of course people want world-class, free/cheap housing provided to them, paid for by someone else. Etc. Once you go down the rabbit hole of thinking that you can make some argument to justify forcibly spending other people's money on your consumption (be it because you think there is some 'positive right' involved or have some ideological preference to transfer incomes or whatever), the question reduces quickly to just one of how much you can force them to pay, how much income you can transfer, and how much consumption that will get you before the well dries up or political constraints take hold.
In many of those other arenas, we actually can/do "design" systems that work to give people what they actually personally value (via revealed preferences) - a price system. This usually has to give up on the idea that they're going to strong arm others into paying for it, but it allows consumers to locate themselves on their own pareto frontier, rather than imagining that they can just take more from the imaginary well of other people's pocketbooks and magically push the world to a state far to the top right of the pareto frontier. They can choose for themselves how much they value speed or quality or money. It's when they think that they get to choose between speed, quality, and other people's money that we run into problems; of course they're going to sacrifice other people's money. Guaranteed they'd sacrifice other people's money if they could get away with it to give themselves endless steak rather than spaghetti. No, this problem is not unique to healthcare; it's just one of the domains where we perpetually fail to acknowledge what we've truly figured out about the world and somehow keep being confused about why doing this obviously perverse thing keeps producing the same well-known failures.
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