Why the U.S. Spends So Much on Healthcare
- snitzoid
- 20 hours ago
- 2 min read
What's missing here is the real elephant in the room. Americans on average take miserable care of themselves and are obese. This drive chronic disease which accounts for almost 70% of medical costs.
If people would start eating right and getting some exercise, demand for medical service would plummet and with that pricing.
As prices continue to drop look for GLP1s to be taken like Aspirin. That will lower societal obesity and introduce a new set of albeit smaller problems. Gastrointestinal issues, loss of muscle mass...etc.
Why the U.S. Spends So Much on Healthcare
A big reason is the high prices Americans pay for surgeries and drugs
By Andrew Mollica and Anna Wilde Mathews, WSJ
April 6, 2026

Sources: International Federation of Health Plans; Health Care Cost Institute
Americans spend more on healthcare than anyone else in the world. Just insuring a family here costs nearly $27,000 a year, enough to buy a car.
The main cause: Prices are far higher in the U.S. for the same medical products and services, from surgeries to drugs.
American patients have also been using more care recently, including costly hospital treatment and expensive new drugs for weight loss. That has pushed up spending as well.
Here are some of the factors that make U.S. healthcare the most expensive.
Prescription drugs cost a lot more in the U.S.
Most other nations force drugmakers to accept lower rates, while the U.S. government generally doesn’t.

Big hospitals can charge higher rates because of consolidation
One reason for higher surgery and other prices: Many cities and communities are now dominated by a single hospital system, partly because hospitals have been merging in recent years.
The consolidation has given hospital systems leverage to command higher rates during negotiations with health insurers. The insurers would lose business if powerful hospitals shut them out.

The U.S. spends far more than other countries on administration
The costs include functions like billing, claims processing and customer service.

Labor costs are higher
American doctors and nurses generally make more than their counterparts in other countries, another factor that can drive up the cost of care.

Healthcare utilization has grown faster than prices in the most recent years.
