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- 13 de Mayo, 2019
The cost cuts would have to be massive. Is there any specifics you can provide? A link or two maybe?
What country are you from? If you don't mind my asking.
Okay so the reason I didn't want to link it is because I'm too lazy to wade through his policy page which has a tonne of shit.
Our Policies - Yang2020 - Andrew Yang for President
Solution-driven policies for the opioid crisis, medicare for all, basic income, gun safety, legalizing marijuana, and more.
But since I'm already getting shat all over I might as well continue.
This article details talks about how he wants to legalise weed and then pardon non violent offenders: https://www.businessinsider.com.au/...on-non-violent-offenders-420-2019-4?r=US&IR=T
He spoke about the policy on the Joe Rogan podcast episode he did. I agree with it because I think that the War on Drugs has imprisoned a lot of people who probably wouldn't be imprisoned in other countries. Removing that many people from paying taxes and turning them into tens of thousands of dollars that tax payers must pay every year must balloon expenditure.
Regarding his healthcare policies you can find a pretty undetailed thing on his website: https://www.yang2020.com/policies/medicare-for-all/
With a shift to a Medicare for All system, costs can also be controlled directly by setting prices provided for medical services. The best approach is highlighted by the top-ranked Cleveland Clinic. There, doctors are paid a flat salary instead of by a price-for-service model. This shift has led to a hospital where costs are visible and under control.
Essentially setting the prices so that insurance companies can't make a paracetamol tablet cost $250 bucks would be a fantastic way to save money. It's not as if the money isn't there to pay for healthcare costs, it's just that a massive amount of the money is going to the insurance industry.
On education: https://www.yang2020.com/policies/controlling-cost-higher-education/
Basically what I said minus the loans part. I assume it would be regulation to reduce the costs of tuition but he doesn't really go into it much here. I think he went onto it more on the Joe Rogan podcast but I honestly can't remember.
oh and I'm from Australia.
I should add that while I don't think Yangs numbers realistically add up I do think that it's an interesting thought experiment and I really like his ideas of pushing lawmakers to think about unrigging the economy for millenials, increasing the tax base of the US and making it easier for people to increase their standard of life.
If I was American I would definitely feel like a lot of the tax money spent on the military is money that could be better spent improving infrastructure, given to NASA, spent defending net neutrality or literally anything else where actual US citizens could experience some benefit.
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