There is definitely a disconnect occurring based on responses...
@Marvin the Martian we currently have price controls in healthcare. They're just increasing at an increasing rate. They're 100% artificial. And the compounding interest that the public sector receives is only outdone by the compounding interest that the private sector receives.
I asked, "how are goods in healthcare priced?" And
@Spartans9312 hit the nail on the head. They're priced based upon a percentage the supplier can extract from the end-user. Therefore, the costs that hospitals are paying for colostomy bags or MRI machines aren't tied to the inputs, but rather tied to the price/value(think FFS) of the service.
If you look at the charts for any good related to healthcare, you will see the same compounding interest curve. Not only that, but the price is based on the assumption that an MRI machine will be used by a ratio of 75% (IIRC)private users and 25% public users. It's the same machine, right? Since, private reimbursements are getting larger at an increasing rate-faster than public reimbursement rates are rising- any hospital that falls below that 75% threshold is "losing money". IOW, the costs for goods and equipment are moving toward the private reimbursement and away from the public reimbursement, because of the divergence between the two compounding interests.
"Just because you woke up on third base, it doesn’t mean you hit a triple." That is too say, people who claim public reimbursement rates are too low, don't understand the dynamics.
Edit to add: There is more than one way to skin a cat. Third parties definitely add to costs. United Health Group...
https://images.app.goo.gl/nFAeyGe6hqSu4nos5
Increasing at an increasing rate...like everything else.