The American health care debate runs on euphemisms. “Choice.” “Access.” “Public option.” “Affordability.” Each of them is a way of avoiding the structural problem: the United States runs the most expensive health system in the world by tying coverage to employment, fragmenting payers across thousands of competing entities, and inserting a profit-extracting middle layer between patients and care. Every reform short of single-payer keeps that architecture intact. That’s not an accident. That’s the point.
What the data actually shows
The U.S. spends roughly $13,000 per capita on health care, nearly double the OECD average, and gets worse outcomes on life expectancy, infant mortality, and preventable deaths than every other wealthy democracy. Administrative costs alone are estimated at 25 to 30 percent of total spending โ money that buys no care, only billing. Roughly 25 to 30 million Americans remain uninsured, another 40 million-plus are underinsured, and medical debt is the single largest source of bankruptcies. Medicare, the single existing federally administered program, runs at administrative overhead under 3 percent and consistently outperforms private insurance on patient satisfaction. The empirical case isn’t subtle.
Why every other proposal falls short
The ACA expanded coverage meaningfully and left the underlying cost structure untouched. The “public option” idea sounds modest until you notice that it preserves private insurance, multi-payer billing complexity, employer-tied coverage, and the network games that make U.S. medicine so expensive. State-level experiments have repeatedly stalled because no single state can capture enough of the system to negotiate prices effectively. Lowering the Medicare eligibility age helps the people who get in and changes nothing about the rest of the system. Each of these reforms is defensible as incremental progress, but each of them is also a way of declaring the structural problem unsolvable so we can move on. Single-payer is the only proposal that actually replaces the architecture instead of patching it.
Why we keep dodging it
The dodging is not mysterious. The health insurance industry employs hundreds of thousands of people, donates aggressively to both parties, and has effectively organized to convince the public that any disruption to the current system would be unacceptable. Hospital systems with monopoly pricing power oppose single-payer for the same reason. Pharmaceutical manufacturers oppose it because a unified buyer can negotiate. Many unions, having fought hard for employer plans, treat Medicare for All as a threat to gains they secured the slow way. The political coalition required to pass it is not impossible, but it requires telling employers and insurers something they don’t want to hear, and elected officials whose campaigns those interests fund tend to find reasons not to.
Bottom line
Calling Medicare for All radical is a political framing, not an analytical one. It is the standard model in every peer country, and the data on cost and outcomes is consistent. The reason it isn’t on the table isn’t that it wouldn’t work; it’s that it would work too well for the constituencies currently profiting from dysfunction. Honest reform discussion starts by saying that out loud.
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