We often look at the medicare systems in developed countries outside the US as arguments in favour of adopting comprehensive medicare in the US. I think proponents of comprehensive medicare in the US often miss out on one crucial factor that has made medicare possible abroad but that hinders it in the US, and that is the US military budget.
Had Canada or any other developed nation (ex-Warsaw-Block-countries aside for obvious historical political reasons) had to carry such a military fiscal burden, could they have succeeded through the democratic process to support such an endeavour? Honestly, I don't know the answer to that, but it is a valid question to ask. IN other developed nations, we might not mind paying the extra tax on medicare owing to the lower tax burden for the military. For the US to achieve the same, however, with its current military budget, would mean a higher tax burden than in our own nations, and all people ahve a tax limit they're prepared to tolerate in a democratic society.
Honestly, I have my doubts that comprehensive medicare could succeed in the US until the US military budget and its debt are brought in check.
Had Canada or any other developed nation (ex-Warsaw-Block-countries aside for obvious historical political reasons) had to carry such a military fiscal burden, could they have succeeded through the democratic process to support such an endeavour? Honestly, I don't know the answer to that, but it is a valid question to ask. IN other developed nations, we might not mind paying the extra tax on medicare owing to the lower tax burden for the military. For the US to achieve the same, however, with its current military budget, would mean a higher tax burden than in our own nations, and all people ahve a tax limit they're prepared to tolerate in a democratic society.
Honestly, I have my doubts that comprehensive medicare could succeed in the US until the US military budget and its debt are brought in check.