Untitled Document
OLEAN -- Even casual readers of newspapers and watchers of TV know the nation's
health care system, if you can call it that, is broken. Americans who get sick
know they'll pay plenty for it, even if they're lucky enough to have insurance.
Yet, while President George W. Bush and his sycophants dither about trying
to "reform" a Social Security system that isn't half as dilapidated
as health care into a windfall gift for Wall Street fat cats, the numbers predict
a national disaster if health insurance isn't looked after soon.
The ranks of the uninsured swell by 100,000 each month. Huge companies that
once viewed health insurance for workers as a no-problem benefit are going broke
partly because of the premiums; General Motors -- which just announced a layoff
of 25,000 full-time workers -- is an example. Some firms encourage lower-wage
workers to sign up for Medicaid, which is drowning in so much red ink that governors
in many states, such as New York, offload much of the cost on already-poor counties
and already-burdened taxpayers.
In just three years, if current trends hold true, government-sponsored programs
such as Medicare and Medicaid will spend more insuring retired Americans than
on the already-immense defense budget. Now, that's going some.
Until about seven or eight years ago, in return for loyal service, retirees
from big American firms could look forward to having their health care coverage
and that of their spouse paid for by their company until death. Then the accountants
and Ivy League business graduates started showing the boss how many millions
could be saved by simply eliminating that perk. The spouses were the first to
go, then the worker. Now, it is an expected elimination.
Workers who planned a retirement of early leisure have to take new jobs just
to pay for health care. I know about this. It happened to me. I expected the
coverage and planned on it through a 40-year career, then "poof,"
it disappeared. When I mentioned it as a possible inclusion in the severance
package during negotiations with the human "services" director, she
looked at me like I was nuts.
The Republican CEOs who run many of the largest corporations spend much of
their time now bitching at their Gucci-shod lobbyists about the crippling costs
of premiums. Just slicing the workforce quarter after quarter, however, is obviously
not a long-term solution, and eventually will ruin the currently beleaguered
economy. And if you think health care provision is a problem only for big firms,
think again. Studies show that premiums to cover workers at smaller firms run
more than 20 percent higher than for the giant corporations -- a big impediment
to development and growth of the small business segment that is the backbone
of the American economy.
The Democrats in Congress are leery about taking on the problem directly because
of their experience a decade ago with Hillary Clinton's disastrous attempt for
her president-husband to shape the U.S. health care system into a streamlined
reflection of other government-administered single-payer systems like Canada's
or France's. Instead -- mainly because she attempted to fashion the whole thing
behind closed doors without public or press scrutiny -- the effort ended up
an indecipherable mishmash of hybrid ideas with a flow chart that resembled
something out of "Mad" magazine.
The failed effort had political consequences. The next election saw Republicans
increase their numbers in Congress just by focusing on the Clinton health care
failure.
Copying the Canadian system -- which drew loud cries of support just a few
years ago -- is considered folly now, because even while drugs are cheaper there
and it is generally fairer to recipients, our neighbors are having problems
sustaining it, and treatment delays are considered incredible by many in the
program.
It is more likely in Washington -- with conservative, business-minded Republicans
running the show with an iron hand in a mailed glove -- that the GOP will be
the first to come to grips with the problem, simply because the corporate sponsors
of so many Republican members of Congress are wailing so loudly about it. The
Republicans, without much luck, have already tried to promote so-called Health
Savings Accounts, which -- while carrying an embedded tax break -- still would
load the greater share of health care premiums onto individuals and wouldn't
extend coverage all that much.
So, who will fashion a plan that would cover every American, cut current waste,
give us more choice of insurance carriers, provide us expectation of reasonable
outlays for maintaining our health, reduce government bureaucracy, tamp down
the increase in future medical costs, strengthen the economy, and yet be politically
viable by offering advantages to Big Business and the other powerful interest
groups involved?
Well, somebody already has. Actually, two somebodies.
In the June issue of the excellent magazine "Washington Monthly,"
two health experts -- Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, an author and cancer physician, and
Victor R. Fuchs, a Stanford University professor emeritus of economics -- describe
their proposed Universal Healthcare Vouchers, or UHVs. As they maintain in their
article, their idea might just "achieve goals long sought by both sides
of the political divide: the progressive dream of universal coverage and the
conservative values of free choice and efficiency."
The plan?
Every American household would receive a government voucher "entitling
its members to enroll in a private health plan of their choice." The current
private health insurance carriers and any new ones would by law have to guarantee
coverage for doctor visits, hospitalization, pharmaceutical medicines, emergencies
and catastrophic coverage.
Those with pre-existing conditions and higher expected costs would be covered
by adjusting reimbursement values of the vouchers to the differing risk levels
the insurance companies absorb. Thus, for covering older and sicker patients,
the insurance company would receive a higher payment -- eliminating the current
incentive to exclude high-risk patients.
Medicare would be replaced, or more accurately, phased out. Senior citizens
currently enrolled in Medicare would see no change, but there would be no new
enrollees. Americans who turn 65 will simply keep their voucher-paid coverage.
Medicare, its hideous payroll tax that financed it, and, as the authors call
it, its "calamitous fiscal future," would over time be completely
replaced by the voucher system.
Because every American would be covered regardless of income, Medicaid and
its terrible burden upon states and localities would also be eliminated.
Private doctors would, like today, choose to accept or reject different insurance
plans. But they would avoid the massive paperwork and fighting with bureaucracies
that causes many to retire early.
Doctors and hospitals would no longer have to absorb, and pass on to insured
folks, the cost of "charity care" for uninsured patients who lack
payment means.
"Frills" coverage, such as for Viagra and cosmetic surgery -- the
source of unending debate in localities and legislatures -- would not be provided
under the UHV plan; you'd have to pay for these non-essentials on your own.
The workplace would be reformed. You could switch jobs, be your own boss, go
to part-time work or any combination of the above without fear of losing your
health coverage.
Employers would be free to hire workers without figuring in the health insurance
costs, thus improving the economy.
A new Federal Health Board would administer the system. It would be modeled
after the Federal Reserve Board, with regional sub-boards.
The voucher system would be paid for by a Value Added Tax, which would probably
increase the cost of your new car by eight percent, but would spread the tax
burden broadly and encourage savings. VATs are much harder for the affluent
to evade than income taxes. Most Americans would be paying about the same for
health care coverage.
But all Americans would have it, and your paycheck would be bigger. The authors
say the cost of extending coverage to all 250 million Americans under 65 would
be about $713 billion. The current cost to employers and the government on health
insurance is about $800 billion, and the system leaves 45 million Americans
without any coverage at all. As the fella says, a billion here and a billion
there, and it adds up to real money.
That doesn't even take into account the tens of billions of dollars spent each
year by Medicaid just to figure out who is eligible and who isn't.
The beauty of this system is this: Very little change would be noticed by people
in the current private delivery system or by users of health care insurance,
and it's politically viable. When the Pew Research Center in 2003 asked Americans
if they would support universal health care even if it meant rescinding Dubya's
tax cuts, 72 percent said yes, including a majority of Republican respondents.
Once the Big Business lobbyists start to study this thing, my prediction is
the Republicans will get serious about backing it. No more health care costs?
CEOs would snap at it like bass to a fat minnow.
We'll see, of course. The current non-system has so many special interests
involved that anything could happen. But almost anything is better than the
status quo.