A Government Healthcare Alternative
A few years ago I began to find the hard-core libertarian anarcho-capitalist advocacy to be getting sterile. I would sit in some local discussion groups and the things we would argue about were so far outside of reality or what was realistically politically possible that they seemed pointless to talk about. Taking a simplified example, baseball purists can argue all day the designated hitter rule should go away but it is never going to happen (players support it because it creates another starting roster spot and owners like it because it juices offensive numbers which drive ratings). So I embarked on suggesting some left-right compromise positions on certain issues.
One result was my proposed climate compromise, which fit the classic definition of a good compromise (both sides don't like it) as many skeptics disowned me for writing it and the environmental Left campaigned hard against a similar proposal in Washington State.
I tried something similar with a proposal for restructuring the government role in health care. First, I defined what I think are the two most important problems a government health care proposal has to address. Most current and proposed plans fail to address at least one of these:
The first is a problem largely of the government's own creation, that incentives (non-tax-ability of health care benefits) and programs (e.g. Medicare) have been created for first dollar third-party payment of medical expenses. This growth of third-party payment has eliminated the incentives for consumers to shop and make tradeoffs for health care purchases, the very activities that impose price and quality discipline on most other markets.
The second problem that likely dominates everyone's fears is getting a bankrupting medical expense whose costs are multiples of one's income, and having that care be either uninsured or leading to cancellation of one's insurance or future years.
I think the second point is key. Everyone keeps talking about a goal of having coverage -- coverage even if you don't have money or don't have pre-existing conditions. But that is not, I think, the real human need here. The real need is to be protected from catastrophe, a personal health-care crisis so expensive it might bankrupt you, or even worse, might deny you the ability to get the full range of life-saving care. Everything else in the health care debate and rolled up in Obamacare is secondary to this need. Sure there are many other "asks" out there for things people would like to have or wish they had or might kind of like to have, but satisfy this need and the majority of Americans will be satisfied.
And so I proposed this:
So my suggestion ... was to scrap whatever we are doing now and have the government pay all medical expenses over 10% of one's income. Anything under that was the individual's responsibility, though some sort of tax-advantaged health savings account would be a logical adjunct program.
I found out later that Megan McArdle, who knows way more about health care policy than I, has been suggestion something similar.
How would a similar program work for health care? The government would pick up 100 percent of the tab for health care over a certain percentage of adjusted gross income—the number would have to be negotiated through the political process, but I have suggested between 15 and 20 percent. There could be special treatment for people living at or near the poverty line, and for people who have medical bills that exceed the set percentage of their income for five years in a row, so that the poor and people with chronic illness are not disadvantaged by the system.
In exchange, we would get rid of the tax deduction for employer-sponsored health insurance, and all the other government health insurance programs, with the exception of the military’s system, which for obvious reasons does need to be run by the government. People would be free to insure the gap if they wanted, and such insurance would be relatively cheap, because the insurers would see their losses strictly limited. Or people could choose to save money in a tax-deductible health savings account to cover the eventual likelihood of a serious medical problem.
A few weeks ago I started reading the blog from the Niskanen Center after my friend Brink Lindsey moved there from Cato. If I understand him, Niskanen has quickly become a home to many libertarian-ish folks who focus on real workable, executable policy proposals more than maintaining libertarian purity. In that blog, Ed Dolan has proposed something he calls UCC (Universal Catastrophic Coverage) which would work very similarly to what I proposed earlier:
Universal catastrophic coverage is not meant to cover every healthcare need of every citizen. Instead, UCC would offer protection from those relatively rare but ruinous healthcare expenses that are truly unaffordable. (Note: As we use the term UCC here, it is not to be confused with the more narrowly defined catastrophic insurance that is available, in limited circumstances, under the ACA.)
Here is how UCC might work, as outlined in National Affairs by Kip Hagopian and Dana Goldman. Their version of the policy would scale each family’s deductible according to household income. The exact parameters would be subject to negotiation, but to use some simplified numbers, the deductible might be set equal to 10 percent of the amount by which a household’s income exceeds the Medicaid eligibility level, now about $40,000 for a family of four. Under that formula, a middle-class family earning $85,000 a year would face a deductible of $4,500 per family member, perhaps capped at twice that amount for households of more than two people. Following the same formula, the deductible for a household with $1 million of income would be $96,000.
The cost of the catastrophic policy would be covered by the government, either directly or through a refundable tax credit. The policies themselves could, as in the Swiss model, be offered by private insurers, subject to clear standards for pricing and coverage. Alternatively, they could take the form of a public option, for example, the right to buy into a high-deductible version of Medicare.
With UCC in place, people could choose among several ways to meet their out-of-pocket costs, which, for middle-class families, would be comparable to those of policies now offered on the ACA exchanges.
One alternative would be to buy supplemental insurance to cover all or part of expenses up to the UCC deductible. The premiums for such supplemental coverage would be far lower than policies now sold on the ACA exchanges, since the UCC policy would set a ceiling on claims for which the insurer would be responsible. If the supplemental policies included modest deductibles or co-pays of their own, they would be more affordable still. Although UCC itself would be a federal program, the supplemental insurance market would continue to be regulated by the states to meet their particular needs.
Very likely, many middle-class families would forego supplemental insurance and cover all of their routine health care costs from their regular household budgets, the way they now pay for repairs to their homes or cars. Doing so would be easier still if they took advantage of tax-deductible health savings accounts—a mechanism that is already on the books, and could be expanded as part of reform legislation.
The main thing that has always flummoxed me is that I have no idea how expensive this plan might be. Dolan is claiming it could be done at reasonable cost.
As it turns out, the numbers don’t look all that bad. Because UCC leaves responsibility for routine care with individual families, in line with their ability to pay, it would be far less expensive than a system that offered first-dollar coverage to everyone. Hagopian and Goldman estimate that their version of UCC would cost less than half as much as the projected costs of the ACA.
The impact on the federal budget would be further moderated if the tax deduction for employer-sponsored insurance (ESI) were phased out as UCC came online. Tax expenditures for ESI currently cost the budget an estimated $235 billion per year, an
That might be true but words mean something. A contract is a contract and enforceable. My point is the same; it is neither fair nor legal to take away an insurance from someone who has already paid the premium and completed his part of the contract. IMHO If you want to create a program like what was suggested you do it with those people who are demanding it and do not already have a contract. AND most importantly you do it with their dollars and not mine. Everyone who claims to want to fix this "problem" wants to fix it with other people's money. Then they wonder why there is push back and try to make it a "Republican" or "conservative" thing. Create an insurance pool of just those people who you feel don't have insurance. Make it is cadillac or minimal as you like and then let those who sign up pay for it. Simple as that, problem solved.
You use big words to impress yourself from a book that you read that you conceptually don't understand. You are an arrogant bully who thinks that people are impressed by your name dropping. You made no counterpoints whatsoever and because you absolutely have no ability to conceptualize you wrote a bunch of incoherent garbage. As to me being butt hurt I think you want to believe that in your small little fevered brain so that you can believe you are the vanquisher of all that is dumb, because YOU are the smartest guy in the room. Breaking news you are a troll and have nothing to contribute to the conversation other than your condescending stupidity. Go back to the bridge from whence you came ignorant virtue signaler. Ohh and next time you read a book make sure you read it a couple times so that you can understand the underlying concepts and not just wrote memorize specific cherry picked words and phrases. Perhaps the block function in Disqus is more inline with the type of person that you are, not who I am.
In the olden days, if you were poor and took your child to the doctor
for a sore throat, he might prescribe honey and ginger, and the poor
father might pay the doctor with a couple of chickens. While he might
prefer cash, the doctor and his family can certainly use a chicken or
two for Sunday supper. Of course, if there was a serious flu-related
infection involved, the child could die, but that was the state of
medicine in the olden days.
Nowadays, that same flu-related infection may involve intensive care
costing tens-of-thousands of dollars, but survival is much more likely.
However, the poor father may not have thousands of chickens pecking
around his yard, and even if he did, the extensive hospital staff,
support personnel and equipment manufacturers required to treat the
child may not have a need for thousands of chickens or a place to put
them. Instead, the cost must be borne in cash. The good news is that the
child may qualify for Medicaid, meaning the preventive care of a flu
shot may forestall the necessity of trying to pay the hospital bill with
thousands of chickens.
Of course although it's pretty obvious that in general, Americans are leading longer, healthier lives today because medicine has advanced significantly since, say WW II. I call that expanding "supply".
Making American Medicine Great Again in the way I describe has several ancillary benefits and can act as a countermeasure to other problems we think are going to get worse.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2NO8lnC7u3w
Well... The problem is they take my chickens to pay for the bills of those who chose to not work. And If I don't give up those chickens willingly they will arrest me, put me in jail and impoverish my family. Redistribution of wealth is wrong, immoral and unconstitutional. The problem with this entire discussion is that it is like two wolves and a lamb deciding what is for dinner. As the lamb, I object.
If, Goodness Forbid, you or your family ever have cancer, you will almost certainly hope to benefit from government investment in cancer research.
"There are many ways to fulfill these desires, but they can generally be
broken down into two categories: free trade and coercion." How on Earth did you ever come to this conclusion, and why would that categorization (if it can in anyway be justified) be better than others?