“It would be hypocritical to say that health care is not a job. There is no such thing as free health care, it is an illusion,” Peter Markie Zay said in an interview last summer on M1 on Monday. According to Christian Rizzo Erdelli, an analyst at the Perspective Institute, the left-wing prime minister prefers the model used in the United States, where insurance companies operate at a terrible profit, and millions of people still do not have health insurance and do not take the necessary interventions.
I will pay for health care
According to his previous statements, the left-wing prime ministerial candidate would offer the same healthcare model that Ferenc Gyurcsany and his government tried before 2010. Business-based paid healthcare with privatized hospitals and care facilities. Márki-Zay also subsidizes the visitation fee, and thinks it’s wrong to be a taboo subject. According to Christian Rizzo Erdelli, an analyst at the Perspective Institute
In Hungary, it has only happened during Gyurcsany’s government since changing the system to make healthcare paid, giving public hospitals into private hands and charging people different fees – visitation fees and prescription fees. Mark Zee’s statement is a continuation of this idea
The analyst noted.
As he said, this is not the first hard-to-interpret statement of Peter Markey G., but it may be the first statement people have made in a national referendum to think differently.
In 2008, 80 percent of voters rejected the initiative.
The practice in the US is all Mark Zee talked about: It basically doesn’t cover overseas health insurance, only for certain age groups, and Americans may qualify for free care if they’re insured by their employer. However, the task of the responsible government of a country in the European sense is to provide its citizens with “expensive” treatments in private care, free of charge, as well as paying appropriate contributions, Krisztián Rezs Erdélyi emphasized. According to the analyst
The result of privatization is that a large number of people are simply excluded from the health insurance system.
In the United States, where insurance companies operate at terrible profit, millions of people still do not have health insurance today, and in many cases, due to the high cost of testing, do not want to take the necessary interventions themselves.
The “competitive health model of individual insurance” proposed by Peter Markie Zay is poorly understood, according to the analyst. This is due to the assumption that there is a state insurance company if there is only one insurance company in the system, and the operation of several (private) insurance companies is a competing model, but it cannot be interpreted as a single insurance system.