Healthcare isn't a public good. Emergency rooms only have the legal obligation to stabilize without payment.
[HR][/HR]1) A
public good is nonrival in consumption: even though one person consumes the good, others may also consume it.
2) A
public good is nonexclusive: it is impossible (or at least
very costly) to exclude anyone from consuming the good.
[HR][/HR]--James A. Brander, "Government Policy toward Business" (4th ed.)
I'd say
healthcare is a public good by definition (which you failed to provide as justification), just like water and electricity supply, sewage treatment, light-houses (possibly obsolete example), roads,
national defense...
I'm also somewhat confused by your desire for "single-payer", socialized medicine, yet emphasize free-markets--with a delusional hat-tip to the demonstrably false model of
perfect competition--as a solution
.
Furthermore, you implied a responsibility for gov't as a preventative (i.e.
tax sources of negative externalities) but leave the crux of the matter (treatment) open-ended.
If you want the former, why extol the latter?
Can you expound upon this seeming contradiction in your logic? It's possible I am missing something in the links of your reasoning.
Where is this
threshold of personal responsibility such that "free-market" solutions are better in your opinion? At the door, or in the bed? Somewhere in between?
In Canada, we've been having debates (at least among economist circles) of modifying our system just a little to reduce
waste (i.e. someone going to the emergency room for "sniffles", etc.) by imposing a token $5 or $10 charge, which really only covers some basic capital costs like stationery. But putting that minor threshold in the way will cause people to reassess their
need. This is still considered
nonexclusive because if there is a need, the person will still receive treatment (since someone will put-up the $5 quite readily if the patient is obviously without means). There is also an experiment underway that
rewards efficiency of treatment, so as to also reduce wait times...
These kinds of ideas are how one "tweaks" a
public healthcare system. Now doesn't that seem simpler and less costly than trying to expand a "free-market"?
Because your version of market solutions sounds like it requires even
more complexity with respect to gov't involvement than a public system.
However, as mentioned, I may just misunderstand some link in your logic...