¶ … experienced a significant increase in the cost of health care. In 2004, 16% of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) was spent on health care. In 2010, President Obama signed the "Affordable Health Care for America Act (HR 3962)" that has been a topic of heated debate since discussions began decades ago. Health care funding and design has been a major issue for U.S.
Provide a discussion that demonstrates you have an understanding of the impact the cost of health care has on the economy. Be sure to discuss the Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
According to Forbes (2012), America does not have a debt problem; it has a healthcare one. The price of health care is eating up the economy.
Health care spending is growing to almost 1.5 times the rate of growth of its gross domestic product (i.e. The market value of all its goods and services within a certain time) and is already close to 20% of how much it earns.
The graph below shows how, if this pattern continues, healthcare costs will eat up U.S. GDP within the next three decades.
Source; U.S. Health Care Expenditure As A Percent of GDP; Data via bea.gov & cms.gov
The blue line indicates federal government's projection of health care spending. The red line projects the effect on U.S. GDP if trend were to continue the way it has for the next 20 years.
The problem is that this cost of healthcare may exact such as massive onus on U.S. Treasury that it will have little to no fiscal resources set aside for social security, defense, or any other critical national need. Taxes will rise sharply or the U.S. will have nil fiscal credit. (Forbes. (2012)).
Moreover, financial crises produce more recipients of healthcare benefits increasing the burden on the Government. Health care costs, for instance, were 20% of GDP before the recession. 20012 saw them rise to 24%. With the increase of needy recipients, and the increase in costs of healthcare technology as well as introduction of new technology and demand for this technology, healthcare costs are expected to grow. The U.S.A. is the hotbed of new technology and both hospitals and payers demand services for its use despite shrinking resource to pay for its usage. People want the "latest and the best" especially when insurance can be used to pay for this service. Hospitals compete for clients on the basis of this new technology. Legal risks and health plans also push hospitals to invest in this new technology. Technology is on the rise and parties such as Medicare are predicted to have an even harder time making ends meet to provide government insurance for those who need it.
In short, the cost of insurance keeps mounting making insurance even more intimidating for those who can barely afford it. Third party payers (such as Medicare and Medicaid) do little to hold down the costs, and new technology and prescription drugs as well as labor costs just increase it.
2. Health care legislation impacts an array of factors such as quality of health care, insurance coverage, the free market, etc. Select two to three (2-3) areas impacted by health care legislation such as HR 3962, and provide an argument in support of the health care act and two arguments that are in opposition to such a health care act.
Legislation such as HR 3962 intends to provide affordable care to all Americans. Results would be like that which Obamacare. signed in 2010, intends. These include the following three:
1. widened access to insurance where there will be less deaths and casualties due to all American citizens receiving at least the rudiments of medical treatments;
2. quality improvement in the services provided to those who can least afford it so that there is ideally little distinction between quality of medical service reduced to the rich and between that provided to the poor;
3. Financing long-term care for an increasing aging population. (Focus on Health Reform)
The advantages are obvious: it seems only fair that people who cannot afford insurance should be allowed access to something that is one of the basic rudiments of life: medical care. America touts itself as democracy. Democracy entails equal treatment to all regardless of socio-economic differences. All people, therefore, should be entitled to medical care regardless of whether or not they can afford it. Employers too should be made to contribute to
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