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#88609 - 11/24/09 03:48 PM
Re: $1500 Pimple - Our Health Care
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Senior Member
Registered: 03/28/02
Posts: 2814
Loc: Xingyi, Guizhou (China)
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Originally posted by FAEbGBD: So if the government would actually get involved in finding answers to those problems, rather than finding ways to pay for it themselves, we might actually get somewhere. If that guy hadn't got his hundreds of millions, and got $50000 a year instead, and all the cost savings were spread among all of the healthcare bills over those years, how much less would the pimple have cost?
What is the relative cost for food, a house, in Taiwan? I mean, if the pimple had cost $60, it's still 1000% higher than it would have been in Taiwan. Locally produced food is much cheaper than imported food. Imported food can be very expensive as there's a smaller market for it (distributor's excuse). Taiwan has enjoyed four years of rising house prices. Prices rose by 8.86% across Taiwan in the year to end-Q1 2008, according to the Sinyi House Price Index. Residential property in Taipei city increased in price by 7.06% over the year. Sales of upscale properties worth more than NT$30 million per unit (US$922,500) jumped 70% in the year to November 2007, according to a report by Yungching Real Estate Agency, while sales of houses costing less than NT$6 million (US$184,500) dropped 10%. Real estate agents have observed a noticeable increase in returning Taiwanese businesspeople buying houses or apartments, especially in Taipei. At the bottom end of the market the complaint is that house prices have climbed beyond ordinary affordability levels. Indeed, Taiwan has the highest price/rent ratio in Asia, at 42:1, exceeding even the levels of Hong Kong, Singapore, and Bombay, India. Regards Taike ------------------ Bo pen nyang.
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最猖獗的人权侵犯 者讨论其他国 家的人权局势而忽略本国严重的人权 问题是何等伪善。
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#88617 - 11/29/09 06:51 AM
Re: $1500 Pimple - Our Health Care
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Senior Member
Registered: 08/23/04
Posts: 2207
Loc: Dayton, OH USA
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Originally posted by FAEbGBD: Well then, if the government says it's already paid for, then we have nothing to worry about. No government program has ever cost more than they said it would. Nope, never. Oh wait, they all do. Kind of like unemployment going up and up, but look at all the jobs being saved and created. Just look at all the money we'll be saving by spending it. Guesss I'm just not as smart as some people.
[This message has been edited by FAEbGBD (edited 11-29-2009).] True the Gov't has a pretty iffy track record at containing costs. Just look at our military expenditures, postal service and Amtrack... That said, the Congressional Budget Office, Not the White House or the Congress says it will have this financial effect on the deficit. Also, MIT just released a study yesterday that suggests premiums should go down for most Americans' health care costs. The CBO releases their preview on effect on premiums this week-it'll be interesting to see if their outlook jives with MIT's. Who's suggesting we have nothing to worry about? This won't be the end of fixing healthcare by a looooong shot. There's not nearly enough in either Bill that addresses costs, so we'll all be back here in a year working on this again. To address costs meaningfully, we'll need to get everybody in the boat and have some adult type discussion on how best to spend limited health care dollars. IMO, this Country isn't ready for that kind of conversation yet, so I don't see it happening anytime soon. Other Countries have figured this out, why not us? Sometime taxes aren't bad things. Taxes pay for any number of things society has deemed worth it, like Parks, Sewage & Water systems, Education, etc. I have great healthcare and would be willing to pay higher taxes so other Americans could have access to health care. I'd rather pay for them to go to the GP for a $20 co-pay on a check up than hundreds/thousands on an ER visit for a stupid head cold. Unemployment is going up, but the rate of unemployment claims is slowing, which is better than if it wasn't. Employment is a lagging indicator in an economic recovery, so its one last things that will really improve. These are all pretty complex issues. Smart people from both political parties haven't figured it all out yet. ------------------ Bill in Dayton [This message has been edited by Bill in Dayton (edited 11-29-2009).]
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Bill in Dayton
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