You're right, it isn't a coincidence; the baby boomers are getting older, and sicker, and taking lots of drugs. Harley Davidson also exploded with profits when they started having mid life crisis. Should the govt. build motor cycles?
A monopoly is a single player; the USPS, for example.Another clue: the health care industry has seen around 400 mergers in the last decade or so. What we have here is an oligopoly (a near-monopoly controlled by a few players).
I understand the value of free enterprise in improving quality and lowering cost. The healthcare industry unfortunately does not exhibit any of these benefits, the reason being little or no compe ion. GM and Chrysler got their asses kicked by Toyota and Honda, and we all agree that they deserved what they are going through. This sort of thing will never happen the way healthcare is set up. I don't see any harm in the government trying to get them to shape up.
In Healthcare you have: Aetna, United Healthcare, The Blues, Humana, JP, and literally hundreds of companies like my own that manage self funded plans; ALL competing. Those are marketed by thousands of insurance agents around the country.
THAT"S on the payor side; on the provider side there are the private hospitals the university hospitals, the medical centers, the county hospitals, the catholic hospitals and the hospital systems all competing. Some doctors work for larger corporations, some form practices with other docs, while many go it alone.
There's compe ion throughout the industry - the government, in a fair fight wouldn't make them any more honest than they already are; it would get smoked. The government, therefore, WILL change the rules.

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