Private Insurance and Government Programs Drive Up Health Care Costs
Letting third parties pay our bills pushes prices higher and limits our options.
Letting third parties pay our bills pushes prices higher and limits our options.
Top-notch health care, delivered fast and for low cost, really isn’t on the government's menu.
A better prescription would be to get government entirely out of health care.
Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death elevates a familiar health care policy dynamic to the foreground of the election.
Gerald Friedman of the University of Massachusetts says yes, while the Pacific Research Institute's Sally Pipes says no.
Gerald Friedman of the University of Massachusetts says yes, while the Pacific Research Institute's Sally Pipes says no.
The GOP’s decadeslong refusal to offer a compelling health care alternative has given Democrats the political upper hand.
Politicians of both major parties are using COVID-19 to advance their pre-existing policy agendas.
The Massachusetts senator failed to expand her appeal beyond a core group of highly educated upper-middle-class voters.
Medicare for All would cost far, far more than he says.
The president promised to protect Medicare and Social Security, America's biggest entitlement programs.
Warren claims total costs for middle-class families would go down under her plan, but there are reasons to doubt this.
Taiwan’s system is less generous than the Sanders plan—yet it still struggles with cost control and access to care.
She's not a libertarian, but Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard is shaking up the race for the Democratic nomination.
Last night's debate started with attacks on Trump, but turned into a referendum on Elizabeth Warren.
By planning to pass single-payer in year three of her presidency, she’s acknowledging it will never happen at all.
The presidential candidate wanted a proposal that was airtight and easy to explain. Her plan is neither.
The Democratic candidates are making promises they can’t deliver.
She hasn't come up with a plan to pay for single-payer. She's come up with a plan to let her claim she has a plan.
Senator can't even accurately represent a plan whose numbers don't remotely add up
Warren says it’s not a tax. But what else would you call a requirement that employers send money to the federal government to finance a public program?
The Reason Roundtable analyzes an establishment smear against a foreign policy heretic, and laments the bipartisan panic against online speech.
Health care policy has dominated the early 2020 debates, and Obamacare has few defenders left.
Her refusal to answer a question about taxes isn’t just dodgy; it’s designed to mislead.
Tonight's Democratic debate is the Massachusetts senator's moment to shine, if she can withstand attacks from her rivals.
Stossel's full interview with Tulsi Gabbard covering war, drugs, free healthcare, free college, the minimum wage, and more.
An argument against Bernie Sanders' health care plan in The New York Times.
In the latest primary showdown, Democrats talked health care and trade but left debt and deficits behind.
The public option comes with plenty of pitfalls.
It’s not just obstructionist Republicans who won't buy into Medicare for All—it’s Democrats themselves.
The California senator's history of flip-flops reveal the emptiness of her campaign—and looming problems for her party.
The idea that "deficits don't matter" has been growing among Trump-supporting Republicans. Democrats are preparing to take full advantage.
A decade after Obamacare, the Democratic Party has embraced health care radicalism.
The presidential candidate is still dodging tough questions.
The cost of single-payer would dwarf the price of Obamacare.
Biden is framing his new plan as a defense of Obamacare. It's not.
The presidential hopeful has flip-flopped on the issue several times.
He might not be polling well, but his proposal on health care draws on work from prominent libertarian economists.
By paying dramatically lower rates, the single-payer plan would lead to a contraction in health care services.
Hospitals gamed the system and costs didn’t come down.
Bernie Sanders' Democratic rivals may laugh at his socialist pretensions. But in important ways, he's winning.
If the past is any sort of guide to what comes next, his fears about a jobless economy (and his policy prescriptions to fix it) are completely misplaced.
Single-payer would eliminate private health insurance as we know it today.
The nation's largest health care program faces a shortfall in less than a decade.
Designing and implementing a government-run health plan would raise many difficult questions.
The Colorado Democrat opposes Medicare for All and universal free college.
A new Congressional Budget Office report shows the consequences of undoing Trump-era rules on less regulated health coverage.
Do you care about free minds and free markets? Sign up to get the biggest stories from Reason in your inbox every afternoon.
This modal will close in 10