So you're seriously saying that if receiving treatment/care for something previously cost $10,000 and now costs $0, that there would be no change in the number of people wanting the treatment?!!
And how exactly do we make the service cost $0???
I don't know how much of the US' current supply of healthcare is currently wasting away with nobody buying it, but I can imagine that if it were a lot, prices would go down.
You seem to be thinking that there is a lot of healthcare available which is not currently sold but which will be sold once prices go down. Can you please apply that logic to other products and see if it still makes sense to you?
Do you think chicken farmers hold back half the eggs while waiting for prices to go down?
Do you think that many people will want to become chicken farmers once you have found a method to lower egg prices?
Do you think egg quality will be better once each egg costs only half as much as it does today?
I assume you believe that demand for eggs will go up once everybody can afford them via the egg insurance system. But unless chicken farmers are currently holding back eggs which they will start selling once prices have fallen, I don't see where supplies can meet that extra demand.
Nor do I believe that this demand is really there. There will be demand for the egg insurance, but whether that translates into demand for eggs is really up to the insurance.
The increase in demand directly leads to the increase in supply, on the assumption that the government makes sure the people are provided with the healthcare they're insured for (to do that, the government pays the rate required to get supply to increase to the point that it meets the increased demand).
I thought the universal health insurance was also meant to keep prices down? If this is just a way to pay more horrendous fees, I would assume all the healthcare providers are in favour of it. Are they?
"since you are forcing the price to be lower than it should be then you are decreasing supply"
Supply and demand simply doesn't work like that. If you want an increase in the supply, it means increasing the price, not decreasing it.
I'm not sure what you are on about.
You _quoted_ a statement that said that lower prices decrease supply. Then you say that that is wrong and that increasing the price would lead to increased supply. So what was wrong about it?
A universal health insurance will lower prices, hence supply will decrease.
If you somehow manage to use a universal health insurance system to increase prices (which it will have to do because current supplies are apparently not covering enough people), you will end up with a healthcare provider monopoly (i.e. all healthcare providers represented by the one health insurance system they all want to work for exlusively because it pays more than the open market).