Excellent, you just decided that Bernie is right. Since the U.S. spends $2.6 trillion per year on health care
http://www.aetna.com/health-reform-connection/aetnas-vision/facts-about-costs.html
and you say that all but $0.6 trillion will be covered, that means that Bernie's plan will cover $2T. You admit that the taxpayer and employer cost will only
total $0.675T. Therefore, Bernie's health insurance program will save us 2 - .675= $1.325T.
Now you're babbling.
Bernie's plan is $.6T short EVERY year and not paid for.
http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-m...ch-would-bernie-sanders-health-care-plan-cos/
Even if we set aside the issue of a potentially unbalanced ledger, experts point out several other problems with Sanders’ simple promise of savings.
First, it’s not guaranteed that workers will have the same quality or amount of care under a Medicare-for-all system.
Most employer-based health insurance policies currently have more comprehensive coverage than traditional Medicare, pointed out William Hsiao, a leading health economist at Harvard University who designed universal coverage systems for Vermont, China, Sweden, and South Africa, to name a few.
While Sanders argues that single-payer will make the health system more efficient, "we have seen no evidence of this from the Medicare program, whose cost has grown substantially faster than the economy for most of the last 50 years," Antos said.
Second, reduced costs could also create issues with access. Lower drug prices limit funding for research and development, lower physicians’ salaries disincentivize people going into medicine, lower fees could bankrupt hospitals, and people would have less choice in health plans, listed Hussey.
And finally, experts expressed skepticism that lawmakers would ever pass Sanders’ single-payer system, which would require a tax increase of hundreds of billions.
"Keep in mind each dollar saved is a reduction in someone’s income, which is part of why this plan is politically untenable," said Don Taylor, a professor of health policy at Duke University. "But if you could wave your hand and do it, we could spend less."
SMACK DOWN