
Originally Posted by
gjm
Annual spending on health routinely increases. Generally by around 2% less than the actual real cost of providing that health care. This is before we take into account continual population growth.
So in 'real' terms, health spending is decreasing year on year.
How do you figure that? Spending increases higher than the rest of the nation's doesn't represent a spending decrease, does it? The fact is the industry is spending more every year, indeed it's spending more per capita every year. In "real" terms that's not a budget "decrease".
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
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