I'm a Canadian,but I've lived in Michigan for the last ten years. I'm retired now and paying almost $1000/month in health insurance premiums. Now, I'm fortunate in that I can afford that, but I'm not the average American,either. I don't know how a regular factory worker (including the ones who work for the same company I did) can afford that kind of cost.
The level of health care available to me when I was working is superior to what I had in Canada, IMHO. Conversely, it is a Cadillac system. I can get anything done in a matter of days, where I might have to wait for a few weeks in Canada. I have family members who have had major health problems, but their doctors could prioritize them to the front of the line, and did. Example,here, I can have my triple bypass at the same time you can have a hernia repaired. In Canada, you might have to wait a while until the hernia gets attention.
Years ago, I asked my doctor (here) about insurance costs for malpractice. He said that wasn't a big cost to him as long as he took all the precautions. He admitted it was common practice to test a patient 15 ways from Sunday, to be sure he was healthy enough for surgery. I understand they have to minimize the risk of me croaking on the operating table, but two EKGs and a stress test to check me out for a hernia repair???? I think a lot of the cost is in the unecessary testing. The day of the stress test the doctor's office forgot to send the workorder to the lab. I'm trying to do this over lunch and not miss work, so the technician suggested that I could pay for it myself, since I was in a hurry. So I ask "How much?". The answer $1100. I waited until the workorder showed up after lunch, but my insurance company got a bill for the $1100, plus two EKGs, plus the surgery. In the surgical theater there was the anaestithist (sp.?), 2 surgeons, another doctor "observing" and a number of nurses. All for a friggin' hernia !! No wonder health care in the US costs at least twice as much as in Canada. But, I'm not convinced the problem is entirely the big insurance companies. The corporations running a lot of the hospitals must be doing pretty good ,too.
Someone asked about taxes in Canada. They are higher, but the comparison isn't easy to make. Health care is one of the biggest expenses, so is education .The split between federal, provincial (state) and municipal taxes is different than here, but the total is certainly higher at higher incomes. The slope of the tax brackets is steeper than in the US.
I intend to run parallel tax calculations for 2010 to see what the difference really is at my current income level. My wife and I are considering moving back to Ontario, now that I'm retired and we need to know the impact . When I add in my health insurance premiums, it balances up some of the extra income taxes. It really is an apples to oranges comparison, but I know I retained more of my income when I moved to Michigan. Much of the difference stems from the lower slope on tax brackets here, and all the deductions you can take, mortgage interest being the most obvious.
Just my $0.02 ,Gang.
Warren