If ignorance is bliss Americans must be the happiest people on earth.
I worked in healthcare finance for 11 years. I worked for providers and payers. "high CEO salaries" are irrelevant. Malpractice lawsuits are irrelevant. Free birth control is irrelevant.
Let's use your example of "high CEO salaries." 106 million. Wow, that sounds like a lot! But when you divide it by the 300 million people in the US you are basically increasing costs by .30 per person per year. Not exactly a major driver. Malpractice is the same thing, it raises your rates maybe .50 per year, tops.
So what is driving healthcare costs in the US? It's quite simple: End of life care.
My dad got cancer at 60. He died of cancer at 63. During those three years he spent $10 million on healthcare costs.
$10 Million!!!!
His best friend lived in Sweden most his life and has family there. He told my dad that when he was diagnosed had he been in Sweden they would've given him some morphine and sent him to hospice care. Sweden would've saved $10 million.
Almost every person demands every test and every procedure available if there is the slimmest chance they will live one more day. We as a society have decided that one more day of life is worth whatever it costs.
Until we as a society do a cost-benefit analysis (DEATH PANELS!! shout the right wingers) we will continue to have high health care costs.
If you want lower health care costs you're going to have to let people with cancer, heart disease (triple bypass surgeries are not cheap), and other serious ailments die rather than trying to keep them alive for a few years.
Every other medical cost you can think of is insignificant next to a $3 million annual bill to keep my dad around a little bit longer.
http://www.cancer.org/cancer/cancerbasics/cancer-prevalence
according to cancer.org there are 15.5 million people with cancer in the US right now. Let's say they don't all cost $3 million per year like my dad did. Let's say they average $10,000 per year (because some have been cured and don't cost much annually, but they did cost a lot up front for treatment). Well, 15.5 million X $10,000 = $155 BILLION
That puts your "$100 million! CEO Salary" figure into perspective, doesn't it?
So, make the choice: Should those cancer patients get life-saving care, or should they be given morphine and sent to Hospice?
Make your choice and stop whining about "gigantic CEO salaries!" or "evil trial lawyers!" or "free birth control!"