I think it was you that posted the per capita numbers I used to derive that. They showed a difference between US and Canadian per capita expenditures of 3,000 per capita. Multiplying that number times our population of 308 million gives 945 billion dollars. Using the unweighted average from your table lead to exactly a trillion dollars.
These numbers seem defensible but these kind of cuts won't put us anywhere near Canada's per capita. We'll still be at the top of the chart on a per capita basis (not that I think that's a bad thing).
Ah, I see now. I would not imagine that any version of UHC adopted by the states would immediately close that per capita gap. The point with administrative costs, however, is that we spend somewhere between $100 billion and $200 billion a year on completely useless costs compared to countries with UHC and even our own single payer system.
Administrative costs are just one of the endless cost control advantages. The reason I brought those up is because of how totally pointless that expenditure is. It has nothing to do with treating people or research or anything important, it's just a reflection of a totally inefficient system.
The total story of cost control is insanely complicated. For instance, when the debate over Obamacare was raging, I heard a report on Dr. Dean Edell that in areas with more doctors, costs increase dramatically. One would imagine that in a capitalist system, having many doctors practicing in a given area would lower costs through competition. What really happens, however, is that they start referring patients to one another when they could very well treat them at one place.
Obviously there are a thousand different elements at play including the odd system of referrals we use in this country, the fear of being sued, and the fact that areas with many doctors tend to be more wealthy areas and the patients tend to have the sort of insurance that makes multiple referrals very lucrative for doctors.
I have no idea how to estimate how much we pay on a per capita basis because of a feature like that. That sort of activity doesn't go on in UHC countries, for a variety of reasons. A raw number for how much we'd save immediately would be purely speculative, but it's clear that we'd save, at a minimum, hundreds of billions of dollars annually and cover everyone.
It's also before factoring in that we want to extend coverage to tens of millions of people who aren't currently covered.
Remember, we pay for those people already. They get the most expensive type of emergency care and insurance companies reflect that cost through premiums.
When you add in the legal fees from bankruptcy the administrative collection fees and the total social fallout of economically destroying people because they got sick/had an accident, 46 million people without insurance is incredibly expensive. Just punting those people on Medicare tomorrow would (after an initial increase in cost) save quite a bit of money over time.
It was you who told me that we spend more and get less. Your numbers put the amount "more" at 3,000 per capita. And in the post I'm replying to you only identified about 600 per capita in systemic waste. That 2000+ discrepancy is at least a little evidence.
No, I identified about 600 per capita in unnecessary administrative costs. That's just one portion of systemic waste. It's just a clear, easily quantified difference, but hardly the total.
My first post in the thread also linked to several sources of evidence of this (plus some opinion pieces I didn't agree with). Let's say I'm wrong about that though, does it change the claim that if the US removes a trillion from the industry that there aren't many countries or entities that can fill that gap?
Why would we want to fill that gap?