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Increasing the Number of Uninsured

The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities has released a new study by MIT economist Jonathan Gruber showing that President Bush's proposal to expand Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) would actually increase the total number of uninsured people in the United States. While 3.8 million people would gain coverage, another 4.4 million would actually lose coverage as a number of employers responded to the new tax breaks by dropping their insurance plans. So on net, more people are uninsured. And this all comes at a cost of $156 billion over ten years. Absolutely brilliant.

Now from what I understand, it seems like Gruber's arguing that those 4.4 million would actually see little or no change in real compensation—what will happen is that many small businesses will just prefer to pay their workers in wages rather than health insurance once the tax advantages towards doing the latter disappear—and those 4.4 million would simply choose not to buy insurance. So it's not clear that the situation is entirely catastrophic. (Although those 4.4 million would all likely be relatively healthy people, and their exit from the insurance pool would raise premiums for everyone else.)

Still, we know that HSAs won't reduce total health care costs (how could they, when 80 percent of costs in this country are due to 20 percent of all patients, and that small minority simply can't and won't control their costs by taking out a high deductible?). They do virtually nothing to address the main health care problem in this country: that 60 million people go uninsured in any given year. Besides which, they transfer the costs of health care from the healthy and wealthy to the sick and the poor. In what universe is this a good use of money? We already have a perfectly good single-payer system in this country—Medicare—that, despite Republican efforts to screw it up, does a wonderful job of controlling costs and achieving universal among a vulnerable and expensive population group. A serious health care proposal might look at expanding that rather than tinkering around with frivolous tax breaks at the margins.

Posted by Bradford Plumer on 02/16/06 at 10:40 AM | E-mail | Print | Digg this | de.licio.us



Comments

I am on medicare; seems like the idiots in D.C. are determined to ruin it & the VA medical system, also. I just learned yesterday in a notice from the VA, that my co-pay for meds is being raised from $7 to $8 which means they will now deduct $164 per month from my SS check, up from $156!! will it ever end? yeah, at death!

Posted by: morris r waldrop on 02/18/06 at 4:52 AM

"Healthcare" to Voodo Economic Witch Doctor Bill Frist and the multitude of other liars on Capitol Hill simply means, we're doing our damndest to care for the economic health of HMO and pharmaceutical corporations at the expense of everyone else, including even our own rich Republican children. After all, doctors know that untreated disease tends to eventually kill all the king's horses and all the king's men just as deadly as the poorest of subjects. . . Or at least, they damn well should know!

Posted by: Richard Aberdeen on 02/18/06 at 7:06 AM

California has a single payer Health plan (SB840) in the works right now. It is patterned after Medicare with strict conrols on administration costs. For more info: www.healthcareforall.org or check it out at the California Senate site.
It's possible that the only way we'll get affordable health care is on a state by state basis. If your state hasn't taken steps toward this, it's time to put your reps on notice and start your own grassroots action.

Posted by: A,Reeves on 02/18/06 at 10:13 AM

What I find amazing is that the studies that are often quoted are so OLD. Why are we looking at mid 90's data? If communication and computing are so advanced, why can't we get data from 2004 (at the very least).
Those that have no insurance should have advocates in Congress that barter with doctors, hospitals and drug companies for the same rates as the people with HMO coverage or at least a reduced rate. The people without coverage are paying far more for their medical care, which is why nothing is being done to resolve the issue. We need a system where we are all covered for some basic healthcare.

Posted by: M. Velong on 02/23/06 at 12:37 PM

The healthcare system in this country is freightenly broken. There is no morallity in Capitalism.

Posted by: Kenneth Kinman Sr. on 03/01/06 at 1:38 PM

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