Once the elderly exhaust their life savings they simply go on medicaid. So we have all the elderly people and all the poor people taken care of. What more do you need comrade?
I think S-Trader was considering the case (not as it is today, but what I proposed) of having everyone pull their own weight / save for own retirement.
What about medical/healthcare/eldercare costs? They can eat away at, or even wipe out retirement savings in a surprisingly short amount of time, they're not easy to anticipate in terms of scale, and we're living longer.
Roughly 40% of us will get cancer at some point in our lives. By age 65, the risk of having Alzheimer’s is one in six (17 percent) for women and one in 11 (9 percent) for men. Beginning at age 60, your chance of getting dementia doubles every five years... and if you survive into your nineties, then there is roughly a one in four chance that you will have dementia. Yada, yada, OK... but many people underestimate both the costs involved for fairly common healthcare/eldercare issues, and overestimate the extent to which insurance will cover those costs.
I agree with you. The current healthcare situation is not sustainable. There's no way lower the cost of cancer, Alzheimer's, etc without curing it completely or preventing it. Even if we could simply raise taxes enough to pay for it all, then that would suck away money for other things that need funding and simply be an unproductive drain on society. I don't think we can simply force or coerce people into having more kids to hopefully be hosts to the growing parasitic drain of healthcare costs. We just need to eliminate / prevent the diseases which cost so much money. Won't be easy, but easier than simply letting grandparents die.
As for "poor life choices" -- aside from the obvious cases (e.g., drug addict, morbidly obese person), how can you really determine or differentiate what those are, and/or to what extent they contributed to any given person's situation?
Haven't really considered that since it will never happen without a dramatic cultural change. However, some ideas:
1. I have heard that in Japan, people have to pass physical fitness tests to qualify for corporate-provided healthcare. (Update: After a 2 minute Google search, I can't find any sources to substantiate this idea. So maybe it's not true or no longer done. However, still might be a good idea for setting insurance rates.)
2. Pretty hard to hide obesity. For those who love taxes, how about a BMI tax?
3. Cigarettes, if not banned, how about $40 / pack? $5 is for the cost of the product, $35 goes towards lung cancer research. I know cigarettes are taxed anyway, but currently the money does not go towards health research.
4. Smokers already pay a higher premium for health insurance. How does the health care company determine if someone is actually a non-smoker or simply lies about not smoking to get the lower rate?
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