Single payer is cheaper- when the payer is a government- has all kinds of advantages of scale, internal efficiency and so forth. These are present in a standard monopoly as well, but the difference is that a standard monopoly has an inherent profit motive that can go unchecked by anyone except the government.
If a government monopoly acts up, "we, the people" can put our foot down.
But generally, government monopolies don't usually operate nearly as cutthroat a manner as private ones do: their predisposition to behave like the bureaucracies they are tends to trump that behavior. They're not hunting to squeeze out more money from the market, they're trying to be better at following their own rules as set down by their regulators.
If a government monopoly acts up, "we, the people" can put our foot down.
But generally, government monopolies don't usually operate nearly as cutthroat a manner as private ones do: their predisposition to behave like the bureaucracies they are tends to trump that behavior. They're not hunting to squeeze out more money from the market, they're trying to be better at following their own rules as set down by their regulators.
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