by Dan Mitchell | Sep 6, 2011 | Blogs, Health Care
I’ve written several times about the sometimes-deadly shortcomings of government-run healthcare in the United Kingdom (see here, here, here, here, here, here, here, and here), so I like to think I’m relatively immune to being surprised. But this story from the...
by Dan Mitchell | Jul 28, 2011 | Blogs, Health Care
A couple of years ago, Paul Krugman assured us that government-run healthcare was a good idea, writing that “In Britain, the government itself runs the hospitals and employs the doctors. We’ve all heard scare stories about how that works in practice; these stories are...
by Dan Mitchell | Jul 18, 2011 | Big Government, Blogs, Government Spending, Health Care
The Beacon Hill Institute in Massachusetts has just released a very good – but very depressing study. The research finds that costs have jumped under Romneycare, but that’s not surprising. After all, politicians always underestimate the cost of new entitlements. The...
by Dan Mitchell | Jun 9, 2011 | Big Government, Blogs, Health Care
This is rather remarkable. According to a story in the UK-based Daily Mail, a man was left to die, on a hospital floor, over a period of 10 hours. I’m not sure whether this is the worst example of government-run healthcare (or non-healthcare, to be more precise). I’ve...
by Dan Mitchell | Jun 7, 2011 | Big Government, Economics, Health Care, Welfare and Entitlements
This is the most depressing – but revealing – thing I have read in a long time: “the health-care sector has twice as many clerical workers as nurses and nine times as many as doctors.” That passage is from a very good column by Robert Samuelson, in which he covers a...