docjames
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- Jul 10, 2007
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Re: Budget 2012
Even the most basic healthcare for a family is ~$150 - 200/month (post 30% rebate). Thats after tax dollars. So $2500/year post tax - increasing without the rebate - I think for many, particularly those only just over what the government has deemd higher income ($80k pa) this is a lot of money, and dont forget the premiums are rising in line with healthcare inflation (not overall inflation) of ~ 7% pa. Dont forget that with basic healthcare there are not insignificant costs associated with actually using those benefits - Excess (anywhere from 0-$1000 pa), outpatient rooms appointments (not covered), medications on discharge etc. I think people will give up private health cover - not just on July 1, but over the coming 2-3 years as costs continue to mount.
The government needs to support these people in private health in the same way they need to put some money into private schools - these are all taxpayers, and it's cheaper to subsidise them into the private system than it would be to expand the public system to cope with everyone (hello NHS).
If we fail to maintain public healthcare we end up in a situation like the USA where healthcare is not readily accessible to all. Is that what we want for our society?
Relative to other countries, we are SO wealthy, even more so with "the mining boom" yet our priorities on how we spend our tax dollars just frustrates me. Dont get me started on our foreign aid which was committed internationally to 0.5% of GDP and is stagnating at 0.35% - when countries like the UK are already at 0.5% and moving to 0.6% despite their financial woes.
I don't think there will be an exodus in private health care. I also think the Govt doesn't need to support people who want to go private. Maybe my profession will need to tighten their belts and meet market rates. Not sure what your specialty is but I don't see any future in public health care, especially for the sort of elective surgery that private health excels in. The wait for a knee replacement around here - basically you will never get it. People are self-funding in private in droves around here.
Even the most basic healthcare for a family is ~$150 - 200/month (post 30% rebate). Thats after tax dollars. So $2500/year post tax - increasing without the rebate - I think for many, particularly those only just over what the government has deemd higher income ($80k pa) this is a lot of money, and dont forget the premiums are rising in line with healthcare inflation (not overall inflation) of ~ 7% pa. Dont forget that with basic healthcare there are not insignificant costs associated with actually using those benefits - Excess (anywhere from 0-$1000 pa), outpatient rooms appointments (not covered), medications on discharge etc. I think people will give up private health cover - not just on July 1, but over the coming 2-3 years as costs continue to mount.
The government needs to support these people in private health in the same way they need to put some money into private schools - these are all taxpayers, and it's cheaper to subsidise them into the private system than it would be to expand the public system to cope with everyone (hello NHS).
If we fail to maintain public healthcare we end up in a situation like the USA where healthcare is not readily accessible to all. Is that what we want for our society?
Relative to other countries, we are SO wealthy, even more so with "the mining boom" yet our priorities on how we spend our tax dollars just frustrates me. Dont get me started on our foreign aid which was committed internationally to 0.5% of GDP and is stagnating at 0.35% - when countries like the UK are already at 0.5% and moving to 0.6% despite their financial woes.