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All of the plans bare resemblance to Romney's plan as far as mandatory health insurance requirements except Obama's.
Edward's plan includes the notion of public-private competition between Medicare and private health insurance companies. In the long-run, this may actually be the back door to a single-payer health care system. No private for-profit insurance company could compete with Medicare in terms of operating costs. Hillary's plan includes insurance pools where customers are placed into pools, where each pool can use collective bargaining power in negotiating premiums with insurance companies.
These are basically combinations of mandatory health insurance laws combined with market regulations and perhaps subsidies to the poor to purchase private health insurance. Some have dubbed this corporate welfare, since you're basically having a government make people purchase private insurance and give money to those private entities.
Kucinich's plan is in stark contrast to all others in that it advocates French-style single-payer. Generally speaking, it's much more clean, less complex, easier to understand than a conglomeration of market regulation, individual health insurance mandates, and a subsidies program for the poor. Such a program eliminates private insurance companies and places everybody into one giant pool, represented by a government entity. Said entity then has absolute bargaining power in determining the costs of medical procedures and the cost of prescription drugs with pharmaceutical companies. This program would likely use Medicare as a foundation.
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