From Niels Veldhuis <[email protected]>
Subject Research Release: Annual health-care costs for typical Canadian family may eclipse $14,000 this year
Date August 20, 2020 11:01 AM
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Dear John,

Today, the Fraser Institute released The Price of Public Healthcare, 2020 [[link removed]]. It finds that the typical Canadian family will pay $14,474 for public health care this year, and single Canadians will pay $4,894. The study, which reveals the health-care costs—paid in taxes—for Canadians, also measures the growth of health-care costs over time.

Below is the news release and accompanying infographic. Please share with your colleagues and friends.

Best,

Niels

Niels Veldhuis | President

The Fraser Institute

1770 Burrard Street, 4th Floor, Vancouver, BC V6J 3G7

Annual health-care costs for typical Canadian family may eclipse $14,000 this year

VANCOUVER—A typical Canadian family of four (two parents, two children) will pay an estimated $14,474 for public health-care insurance this year, finds a new study released today by the Fraser Institute, an independent, non-partisan Canadian public policy think-tank.

“Canadians pay a substantial amount of money for health care through a variety of taxes—even if we don’t pay directly for medical services,” said Bacchus Barua, associate director of health policy studies at the Fraser Institute and co-author of The Price of Public Healthcare, 2020 [[link removed]].

Most Canadians are unaware of the true cost of health care because they never see a bill for medical services, may only pay a small health insurance “premium” tax (in provinces that impose them), and because general government revenue—not a dedicated tax—funds Canada’s public health-care system.

The study estimates that a typical Canadian family consisting of two parents and two children with an average household income of $142,449 will pay $14,474 for public health care this year.

Single Canadians will pay $4,894 for health care insurance in 2020.

Across the income spectrum, the amount Canadian families pay for health care varies widely. For example, the 10 per cent of families with the lowest incomes will pay $471 for health care in 2020, while families among the top 10 per cent of income earners will pay $39,731.

“In order for Canadians to consistently gauge the performance and fiscal sustainability of the public health-care system, we first have to understand how much we pay for it,” Barua said.

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