Why the U.S. Spends Twice as Much on Healthcare as Other High-Income Countries

The United States now spends more than $14,000 per person each year on health care—roughly twice what other wealthy nations pay. Yet its outcomes remain stubbornly average or worse. The paradox at the heart of American medicine is not that people use more care, but that each doctor’s visit, hospital stay, prescription drug, and insurance transaction costs dramatically more than anywhere else in the developed world.
A growing body of international research points to the same conclusion: the U.S. doesn’t suffer from too little innovation or too much illness, but from a system built on high prices, heavy administrative overhead, and fragmented policy choices. The result is a country that spends more than any of its peers while struggling to deliver the kind of reliable, equitable, and cost-efficient care they take for granted.

A red MAGA hat on a cracked foundation with a fading American flag in the background, symbolizing the short-term appeal and long-term consequences of MAGA policies.

The Short-Term Appeal and Long-Term Risks of MAGA Policies

MAGA policies are designed to deliver immediate emotional appeal—whether through tax cuts, immigration crackdowns, or nationalist rhetoric. However, beneath the surface, these policies create long-term risks, from economic instability to weakened global influence. Discover the hidden costs of instant-gratification politics and why America’s future depends on strategic, forward-thinking leadership.