Saturday, September 15, 2018
What You Need To Know About
Medicare For All, Part II
Policy
I offer market-based healthcare solutions.
John C. Goodman Contributor
i
ANAHEIM, CA - SEPTEMBER 08: Former U.S. President Barack Obama speaks during a Democratic
Congressional Campaign Committee rally at the Anaheim Convention Center on September 8, 2018 in
Anaheim, California. This is Obama's rst
campaign rally for the 2018 midterm elections. (Photo by Barbara
Davidson/Getty Images)
This is a continuation of What You Need To Know About Medicare For
All, Part I
8. The real cost of Medicare includes hidden costs imposed on
doctors and taxpayers.
Blahous estimates that the administrative cost of private insurance is 13%, more
than twice the 6% it costs to administer Medicare. Single-payer advocates often
use this type of comparison to argue that universal Medicare would reduce health
care costs. But this estimate ignores the hidden costs Medicare shifts to the
providers of care, including the enormous amount of paperwork that is required
in order to get paid.
Medicare is the vehicle by which the federal government has been trying to force
the entire health care system to adopt electronic medical records – a costly
change that appears to have done nothing to increase quality or reduce
costs, while making it easier for doctors to “up code” and bill the government for
more money.
There are also the social costs of collecting taxes to fund Medicare, including the
costs of preparation and filing and the costs of avoiding and evading taxation. By
some estimates, the social cost of collecting a dollar of taxes can be as high as 25
cents.
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A Milliman & Robertson study estimates that when all these costs are included
Medicare and Medicaid spend two-thirds more on administration than private
insurance spends.
Single payer advocates are also fond of comparing the administrative costs of
health care in the United States and Canada – again claiming there is a potential
for large savings. But these comparisons invariably include the cost of private
insurance premium collection (advertising, agents' fees, etc.), while ignoring the
cost of tax collection to pay for public insurance. Using the most conservative
estimate of the social cost of collecting taxes, economist Benjamin Zycher
calculates that the excess burden of a universal Medicare program would be twice
as high as the administrative costs of universal private coverage.
9. Not a single problem in Obamacare would go away under
Medicare for all.
If everyone could join Medicare, what premium would they have to pay? Would
the premiums be actuarially fair, representing the expected cost of the enrollee’s
heath care? Or would there be subsidies and cross subsidies as there are under
Obamacare? Would the premium vary by age? By income? By health status? By
healthy living choices?
What about the role of employers? Obamacare tried to force them to pay a large
part of the cost of reform by imposing a mandate and requiring them to cover a
liberal set of benefits. Economists tell us that employee benefits are substitutes
for wages and are therefore “paid for” by the employees. But on paper, employers
write checks for about 75% of the cost of insurance for about 95% of the people
who have private insurance. Under Medicare for all, would they get off scot free?
Then there is the exchange. Medicare has one. It’s how roughly one-third of
seniors get into Medicare Advantage plans. Like the Obamacare exchanges, the
Medicare Advantage exchange has government subsidies for private insurance,
mandated benefits, annual open enrollment and no discrimination based on
health status. And, it seems to work reasonably well.
The Obamacare exchanges, by contrast, have been a disaster – with spiraling
premiums, unconscionably high deductibles, extra charges for chronic patients
who need specialty drugs, and a race to the bottom on provider networks that
exclude more and more of the best doctors and the best hospitals.
What will happen when the same politicians, catering to the same interest groups
that gave us Obamacare, set out to design an exchange for their Medicare-for-all
program? That’s anyone’s guess.
But if Democrats know how to defy the special interests and create a workable
exchange, wouldn’t they have done that already in the market for individual
insurance?
10. Medicare is already on a path to health care rationing.
Medicare is already on an unsustainable path. It has made future promises that
far exceed expected revenues, based on the Medicare payroll tax and Medicare’s
share of general federal revenues. Ironically, Democrats, rather than Republicans,
were the first to formally acknowledge this fact. At the time Congress passed the
Affordable Care Act (ACA) creating Obamacare, the Medicare trustees estimated
the unfunded liability in the program at $89 trillion – stretching out indefinitely
into the future. Yet, in the next trustees’ report that figure had dropped to $37
trillion.
Think about that. When Barack Obama signed the ACA into law, he wiped away
$52 trillion of federal government debt. How did that happen? By theoretically
putting the government’s health care spending on a budget.
For the past 40 years real, per capita health care spending has been growing at
twice the rate of growth of real per capita income. That's not only true in this
country; it is about the average for the whole developed world. You don’t need to
be an accountant or a mathematician to know that if an expenditure item is
growing at twice the rate of growth of your income, it will crowd out more and
more of other spending – eventually taking up the entire pie.
To deal with this problem, there are three "global budgets" that Obamacare
promised to restrict three budgets to a rate of growth no greater than the rate of
real GDP growth per capita plus about ½ of a percent . These budgets are total
Medicare spending, Medicaid hospital spending and (after 2018) federal tax
subsidies in the health insurance exchanges.
If these budgets are binding, the burden of excess growth in health care spending
for the federal government will have been relieved – forever.
But here is the problem. The Obama administration only “solved” the problem
with pen and ink. It didn’t give the private sector any new tools to control costs. It
didn’t empower doctors or hospitals to practice medicine in a more efficient way.
There was an enforcement mechanism: An Independent Payment Advisory Board
(IPAB), tasked with the job of keeping spending below the cap – mainly by
recommending reductions in fees to doctors and hospitals. In a bipartisan budget
deal this year, Republicans in Congress abolished IPAB. But in their latest report,
the Medicare trustees imply they believe future administrations will still have the
power to enforce the spending cap.
That means that Medicare fees to providers will fall progressively behind private
sector fees through time. And that means one of two things must happen. Either
providers will respond to lower fees by providing less care to seniors or they will
shift costs to non-seniors in the form of higher fees, higher insurance premiums
and higher state and local taxes.
One way providers could cut costs is by providing fewer amenities. Hospital
patients could be in wards with, say, 4 or 6 beds instead of single-room occupancy
– the way hospitals used to be configured in this country and the way they still are
in some other countries. Hospital food could be meals-ready-to-eat (what combat
soldiers take into the field) rather than the fancy cuisine some facilities serve up
today.
Another way to cut costs is to deny seniors access to the most expensive care.
Writing in Health Affairs soon after the passage of the ACA, Harvard health
economist Joe Newhouse noted that many Medicaid enrollees are forced to seek
care at community health centers and safety net hospitals because Medicaid
payment rates are so low. He speculated that senior citizens may eventually face
the same plight under Obamacare.
A third way to cut costs is rationing by waiting. It is already common practice for
doctors to prioritize – seeing private-pay patients first, Medicare patients next
I am one of the nation’s leading thinkers on health policy. I am a Senior Fellow
at the Independent Institute and author of the widely acclaimed book, Priceless:
and Medicaid patients last. As in other countries with rationing problems, those
at the end of the line may never get seen.
But if everyone were in Medicare, wouldn’t seniors be on equal footing with nonseniors?
Since there would be no more cost shifting (no private patients to shift
costs to) the entire burden of spending cuts would fall on Medicare patients
themselves. Yet everyone in the medical world knows that older patients have
more difficult problems and take more time. That observation wouldn’t be lost on
practitioners in a system in which time is money and the payment for time keeps
getting smaller and smaller. Seniors would be less favored patients – just because
they are seniors.
However they are made, the future cuts in spending will be large. Writing at the
Health Affairs Blog, former Medicare trustee Thomas Saving and I proposed
several ways of thinking about what Medicare’s global budget will mean for
seniors. One way to think about these changes is to compare them to the average
amount Medicare was spending on enrollees prior to Obamacare. For 65-yearolds,
the forecasted reduction in spending is roughly equal to three years of
average Medicare spending. For 55-year-olds, the loss expected is the rough
equivalent of five years of benefits; and for 45-year-olds, it's almost nine years.
Another way to think about the Medicare spending reductions is to compare them
to an alternative reform that would have reduced spending by the same amount:
increasing the age of eligibility. The Medicare spending cuts called for under
Obamacare are the rough equivalent of raising the age of eligibility for 65-yearolds
from 65 to 68. They are the equivalent of making 55-year-olds wait until they
reach age 70 and 45-year-olds wait all the way to age 74!
Remember, these are spending cuts already called for under current law. They
will be much more severe if seniors have to compete with younger patients for
their care.
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