It should also be noted that the U.S. system is generally ranked as the most responsive health care system (even if it is the most expensive and not everyone has equal coverage). So, here its a philosophical question... is it better to have equal access to health care (as in Canada) where everyone ends up with poor to average health care, or is it better to have an American system where there is a much wider range, but where some people will have it worse than in Canada, but the average person will have it much better?
I realised that the figures quoted by Abe the Man couldn't be right. But I'm not convinced yours are right either.
Is it really the case that in Canada everyone ends up with sigificantly poorer healthcare than the average person in America? Is it really the case that the average American (by this I assume the bulk of the population) gets "so much better" care than the Canadian standard? I have no experience of Canada, but I would need some proof of that. It sounds a bit like the statements declaring that universal healthcare would cost everyone 98% of their income!
The bugaboo in the NHS in Britain is the waiting list. People are prioritised generally according to clinical urgency, though the government has tried to manipulate that politically so it's not invariably true. However, the point is that if you need something right now, you'll get it. On the other hand if you can wait, you might have to. There is probably some incidence of avoidable deaths on waiting lists, but it's not at scandal proportions, and if it were, there are political pressures to resort to. I suspect this incidence is lower than avoidable deaths in America because people don't have insurance coverage - and there have been reports of allegedly avoidable deaths because insurance companies refused to authorise payment for certain recommended procedures. So I think it may be swings and roundabouts.
And never forget that universal healthcare
doesn't remove choice. People still have the choice to fund care entirely privately, out of capital (I mentioned earlier that my elderly mother did that for eye surgery), or to buy additional insurance. So the high end doesn't disappear at all.
The difference is that in an insurance based system, while safety-net care is there for the low income, only the low income people see any benefit. Everyone else has to make other arrangements. Despite contributing to this safety-net care in their taxes. Then the mainstream system has to support a tier of insurance companies and their administration and overheads as well as the actual health care. Insurance costs are set by peceived risk, so those just above the safety net level may be paying very disproportionate slices of their income for cover. And it's all too easy for ordinary average people, perhaps affected by loss of employment or the sub-prime situation, to fall back to the safety net, which is not very good coverage as far as I understand.
So, to your philosophical question. I don't think you have the parameters right, so far as the British system is concerned. There is not equal access. If you are affluent, and want to pay for six-star treatment, either through insurance or from capital, you are entirely free to do so.
What there is, is equal access to the equivalent of the safety net, which is so much higher that it catches almost everyone to their (reasonable) satisfaction, and as a result most people are happy for that to be their entire coverage. This is accessible to everyone, regardless of income, and paid for by everyone according to their means (well, there is an upper cap on National Insurance so that after a certain point you're considered to have paid your dues and it doesn't go up any further).
I think, basically, that you're cutting off the bottom of your range in this arrangement. And some people who might be in the starrier bracket in the US system voluntarily decide to settle for the standard package, because it's seen as good value. But the top? Well, they sky's still the limit.
Rolfe.