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Health (non-Medicare/Medicaid): Adopt South Korea's Approach

Grade B β€” Moderate Evidence

Reduce health (non-medicare/medicaid) spending to the cheapest high-performer floor. South Korea achieves Life Expectancy 83.57 at $3588/cap; United States gets 76.93 at $10333/cap.

Rank #6 of 22 policies

Welfare Score
+39
Causal Confidence
72%
Policy Impact
59%
BH Average
79%

πŸ“Š Bradford Hill Criteria Scores

Temporality100%
Plausibility100%
Coherence100%
Consistency94%
Strength of Association86%
Analogy85%
Biological Gradient66%
Specificity59%
Experiment25%

πŸ’₯ Impact Breakdown

Income Effect
+166%
Health Effect
+5%
Combined Welfare
+39

🌍 Health Systems by Country

How countries compare on this policy domain. The US row is highlighted.

Country$/CapitaLife Exp.Infant Mort.System
Japan$4,69184.81.8bismarck
Singapore$3,01384.11.7mixed
South Korea$3,91483.72.7bismarck
Switzerland$9,04483.43.3bismarck
Norway$8,09383.31.8beveridge
Sweden$6,26283.22.1beveridge
Australia$5,62783.03.1mixed
Israel$3,26682.62.8mixed
France$5,56482.53.2bismarck
Canada$5,90581.74.3single-payer
Netherlands$6,19081.53.1bismarck
Taiwan$3,29580.94.0single-payer
United Kingdom$5,13880.73.4beveridge
Germany$7,38380.63.1bismarck
Costa Rica$1,28580.37.0mixed
Thailand$81278.77.1mixed
Cuba$96678.04.0beveridge
United States$12,55577.55.4private
Brazil$1,32175.312.4mixed
India$23170.825.5mixed

πŸ“‹ Policy Details

Type
budget allocation
Category
health non medicare medicaid
Recommendation
reallocate
Current Status
United States spends $10333/cap, ranks 28/28. 2.9x overspend.
Recommended Target
South Korea model ($3588/cap floor). $2287B/yr savings β†’ Optimization Dividend.
Rationale

Cheapest-high-performer analysis: South Korea achieves Life Expectancy 83.57 at $3588/cap. United States at $10333/cap (2.9x overspend). Top 3: South Korea ($3588), Japan ($4095), Australia ($4544). Savings: $2287B/yr β†’ $17,192/household/yr as Optimization Dividend.

Blocking Factors
political opposition

πŸ”¬ Evidence Assessment: Bradford Hill Criteria

The Bradford Hill criteria are nine principles used to establish evidence of a causal relationship between a policy intervention and its outcomes. Originally developed for epidemiology (1965), they provide a structured framework for evaluating whether an observed association is truly causal. Each criterion is scored from 0 to 1.

Strength of Association86%

How large is the association between the policy and the outcome? Larger effect sizes increase confidence in causation.

Consistency94%

Has the relationship been observed across different populations, settings, and times? Replication strengthens causal claims.

Temporality100%

Does the policy change precede the outcome change? Temporal ordering is a necessary condition for causation.

Biological Gradient66%

Is there a dose-response relationship? More of the policy leads to more of the effect? Gradients support causation.

Experiment25%

Is there evidence from randomized controlled trials or natural experiments? Experimental evidence is the gold standard.

Plausibility100%

Is there a plausible mechanism explaining how the policy causes the outcome? Mechanistic understanding increases confidence.

Coherence100%

Does the causal interpretation fit with existing knowledge? The relationship should not contradict established facts.

Analogy85%

Are there analogous policies that have produced similar effects? Similar interventions with known effects support the claim.

Specificity59%

Is the effect specific to this policy rather than a general phenomenon? Specific associations are more likely causal.

How is the Causal Confidence Score calculated?

The Causal Confidence Score (CCS) of 72% is a weighted average of the nine Bradford Hill criteria. Experiment and temporality receive higher weights since they provide the strongest evidence for causation. The CCS is then combined with the estimated effect magnitude to produce the Policy Impact Score (PIS) of 59%.

See the Optimal Policy Generator paper for full methodology.

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Analysis: Β· Optimitron OPG

Optimitron β€” The Evidence-Based Earth Optimization Game