Sweden Warns Other Nations of Universal Health Care
An informative study conducted by a PhD on socialized medicine was done using Sweden as the example. Sweden is proof positive that those policies enacted to interfere with the free market and run by government do more harm than good. With the failure of Sweden’s system, it should only be obvious that a country a little larger than the state of California would have a horrible negative impact on a country of our size and our population, which already has government debt nearly equal to our equity/GDP.
This single-payer system also recently failed in Hawaii recently – a guinea pig and another example we should learn from.
Sweden is a country of about 9.1 million people on the Scandinavian Peninsula of Northern Europe. Geographically, it is slightly larger than California. It is by any measure a first world country, with a labor force working primarily in industry or the service area, a GDP per capita of about $31,600 and an unemployment rate of 5.6 percent.1
For much of the 20th century, Sweden had a single-payer system of health care in which the government paid almost all health care costs. Like other nations with a single-payer system, Sweden has had to deal with the problem of ever-growing health care expenses causing a strain on government budgets. It has dealt with this problem by rationing health care – instituting waiting lists for medical appointments and surgery.
Sweden stands not merely as a warning about single-payer systems, but also as an example of what happens when market-based reform of such systems do not go far enough.
In the 1990s, Sweden set about reforming its health care system by introducing aspects of privatization. These reforms were limited, however, and the old problems with waiting lists and rising costs had re-emerged by the beginning of this decade.
The experience of Sweden demonstrates that when a nation adopts market-oriented reform for its health care system, the reforms will fail if the market is not permitted to work.
For the full study and article….
Filed under Economy, Foreign Affairs, Health care, National Debt, Socialism, State Issues · Tagged with Foreign Affairs, Hawaii, Health care, National Debt, Socialism, Sweden
Chrysler & GM Have Their Hands Out Again; Sweden Moves Right, Tells Volvo “No.”
Posted by CrabbyCon on March 21, 2009 · Leave a Comment
March 21 (Bloomberg) — General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC may need “considerably” more than the $21.6 billion in aid they requested, which was based on optimistic recovery plans, said Steven Rattner, the Treasury’s chief auto adviser.
President Barack Obama’s auto task force is assessing proposals from GM and Chrysler to decide whether to recommend U.S. assistance or tip the carmakers into bankruptcy. Rattner made the comments yesterday on Bloomberg Television’s “Political Capital with Al Hunt,” airing this weekend. Read more



