I actually don't know what I personally pay. Because it's rolled up with taxes, it feels like I'm not paying, though of course I know I am.
I make £48,000 a year, which is about $80,000.
I pay £700 a month in tax, total. That's $1,170. That's
all my tax. (I also pay half of that again in National Insurance payments, but that's supposed to be going towards paying for my pension when I retire. So $1,755 altogether if you like.)
So, Kelly, I'm paying just about what you pay
just for healthcare insurance, as my
entire tax bill. And I'm not on the breadline, as I imagine you can see.
My wife and I pay $60 per month. It is top shelf coverage.
I smell unicorn poo as well. I'll let the US citizens challenge you on the veracity of that.
However, I would point out that even if that were all you were paying for healthcare insurance for yourself and your wife (and with all due respect I don't believe you), I would remind you that the US taxpayer pays slightly more than we do to fund just Medicare and Medicaid. Which the US taxpayer can't actually access.
Come on, how much do you actually pay into healthcare, altogether? Including employer contributions and taxes as well as personal contributions. And is the healthcare you'd get for this contribution subsidised by the taxpayer in any way?
Rolfe.