Brendan Burgess
Founder
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Why should the taxpayer subsidise the private health care market?
Why should the taxpayer subsidise the private health care market?
I can go to a public hospital and you will have to pay all my costs.
If I go to a private hospital, you would only have to pay half of my costs.
But the real outrage is the €800 per night I am charged for the public hospital bed whereas someone without insurance is charged only €100 a night.
The taxpayer pays almost 100% of the public health care market.
I can go to a public hospital and you will have to pay all my costs.
If I go to a private hospital, you would only have to pay half of my costs.
Some of your points have some merit Brendan but I'm completely with TBS on this one. You have a choice to go to a public or private hospital - many don't have that choice. If you choose to go the private route I don't see why tax payers (many of whom don't have that luxury) should have to pay to fund that choice.But if the state pays 100% of the costs for anyone in a public hospital which the majority seems to agree with, then it's reasonable that they should pay only 50% of my costs in a private hospital.
If you choose to go the private route I don't see why tax payers (many of whom don't have that luxury) should have to pay to fund that choice.
That's because you are paying more tax or, as Shortie pointed out before, you pay the same amount of tax on the same income; i.e. you both pay 20% up to €42,800 and if either of you earn more than that you'll pay 40%. Therefore you both get the same tax break on private health insurance.I would prefer it to remain at 20% otherwise I would get more of a refund than someone paying a marginal rate of 20% who takes out the same policy.
That's because you are paying more tax or, as Shortie pointed out before, you pay the same amount of tax on the same income; i.e. you both pay 20% up to €42,800 and if either of you earn more than that you'll pay 40%. Therefore you both get the same tax break on private health insurance.
Hi Cervelo
Is that true for health insurance? Is it not claimed directly by the health insurance company?
Brendan
It is at the moment but I just presumed you were talking about the way this type of tax relief used to be done in the past
The reason Brendan is that there is an inequality there. If you choose not to wait the 12 months because you want it done quicker, that is your personal choice and I think you should pay for it. It boils down to whether you are in favour of a society where those who can afford it get health insurance and access to a service which is typically faster than the alternative, versus those who cannot afford it and therefore need to wait in queue for the public service. I would personally prefer tax money goes purely towards improving the public service offering without some of that being reduced due to relief given to those who can afford health insurance. I get your point that if you encourage more to go private it would reduce the delays in the public as well as reduce the cost on the state and it's a fair argument to make, I just personally don't like how that would favour those who can afford it only.So I am struggling with the idea that you object to the state paying 50% of the cost, when it's actually saving the state a lot of money.
I get your point that if you encourage more to go private it would reduce the delays in the public as well as reduce the cost on the state and it's a fair argument to make, I just personally don't like how that would favour those who can afford it only.
Why not, to the extent that they are subsidising the State?Brendan
Would you favour making private school fees tax deductible?
It's the same argument really - private schools take pressure off the public system so why aren't the fees tax deductible?
Why is encouraging a subsidy of the public healthcare system an argument against the public healthcare system?You appear to be arguing for something akin to the healthcare system in the US, which is grossly inefficient.
No, it boils down to the fact that we are having the wrong discussion; our public healthcare system is very well funded and should be a better option than the private health alternative. We should be questioning why it is so bad, not why people look for an alternative.It boils down to whether you are in favour of a society where those who can afford it get health insurance and access to a service which is typically faster than the alternative, versus those who cannot afford it and therefore need to wait in queue for the public service.
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