Note from Ripper: Thought I'd pass this along.
By Mark Dunlea, Executive Director, Hunger Action Network of NYS; co-chair, Single Payer New York. [phone and fax redacted by Ripper]
As the various public option proposals in Congress for national health care reform become weaker every day, there is still time for its proponents to support what they really believe in: a single payer, Medicare for all type program.
The architects of creating a "public option" as part of the push
for national universal health care have always admitted that a single
payer Medicare for All type programs was the best solution for America.
It does the best job in controlling costs by eliminating the waste and
bureaucracy of private health insurance while guaranteeing that every
American would receive quality health care and have freedom of choice
in selecting whom to receive health care services from.
The
public option advocates - well-funded public interest groups and unions
used to insider political wheeling and dealing - argued that the lesson
from the 1993 defeat of the Clinton plan was that insurance companies
were too powerful to defeat. Thus they had to abandon the best
solution, single payer, to instead craft a proposal that would have a
chance of passage by ensuring a continued large role for the present
for-profit health insurance industry.
Their solution was to
create an "800 pound gorilla" in the form of a public health insurance
system that would provide quality and affordable health care coverage
to more than one hundred million Americans. It would be large enough to
operate efficiently and achieve cost savings. They argued that by
setting up a fair fight between a public option and the private
for-profit health insurance companies, over time the advantages of the
public option - no profit margins, reduced paperwork and administrative
costs, less marketing costs - would become clear. The public option
would grow stronger, and under the best case scenario, either we would
move to a single payer system or private for-profit health insurance
would become a boutique industry serving the rich.
Before either
House of Congress has adopted a specific plan, the public option 800
pound gorilla has turned into a five pound Chihuahua. And with four
months or more of intense negotiations to take place among the nation's
power players before a final deal is reached, the public option will
only get weaker.
The only clear winner in the process will be
insurance companies. Americans will be mandated to purchase health
insurance - or pay a fine. Insurance companies' revenues - and profits
- will increase under the Congressional plans. The mandate that
everyone purchase insurance is one of the few consensus positions; the
fight instead is over how taxpayers, employees and employers will have
to pay for it.
Single payer advocates have always contended that
public option proponents, despite their commitment to Machiavellian
politics, were naïve politically.
First, public option advocates
violated the basic rule of negotiation by significantly weakening their
opening position (i.e., dropping single payer for a public option)
without getting any concessions in exchange. In addition, by calling
for a major continued role for private for-profit health insurance,
public option proponents also removed what should have been a key focus
on the health care debate, namely that it was in the public interest to
eliminate our present insurance system
Second, there was the
real question of whether a public option would actually accomplish what
its proponents claimed. The history of similar approaches at the state
level in recent decades was quite bad. Doctors and hospitals would
still have to keep in place their expensive billing and cost-tracking
systems to deal with the various insurance programs.
Third, it
was quite clear to everyone but its proponents that a "robust" public
option was going to generate significant political opposition from the
insurance industry. Like most industries, it would oppose anything that
sought major cuts in its market share. Unlike single payer, which had
the evidence of both Medicare and most of the other industrial nations
to prove that it would work, the insurance industry would have a much
easier time challenging the claims of benefits of a public option.
State plans which had tried similar approaches had all crashed and
burned, largely due to its failure to control costs. In addition,
evidence from prior Congressional fights - say with Medicare - showed
that rather than setting up a "fair fight" between the public option
and insurance companies, Congress would likely seek to tilt the
"competition" to favor the insurance companies.
So how has the public option fared so far in Congress?
When
the "public option" campaign began, its proponents sought a huge
"Medicare-like" program. Studies by the Lewin think tank group of the
Hacker proposal estimated that it would enroll as many as 130 million
people. Thus it would enjoy the advantages that make Medicare so
efficient - large size, low provider payment rates (about 20% less than
what private insurance pays) and low overhead (2 to 3%).
Today,
the "public options" outlined in the Democrats' legislation, according
to the Congressional Budget Office, might enroll 10 million people and
will have virtually no effect on health care costs. The program is so
small it would have no impact by itself on reducing the number of the
uninsured. The main House bill would delay establishing a public option
until 2013 - conveniently after the next Presidential election - and
would require it to follow the same rules (drawbacks) of private
insurance. The ability of workers and others who presently have
insurance to move into a public option program is significantly
restricted.
Hacker had proposed jump-starting the public option
plan by moving all or most of uninsured people as well as Medicaid and
SCHIP enrollees into it. Starting with a huge population would reduce
its startup, administrative and marketing costs and give it the ability
to negotiate lower premiums. Under the present Congressional proposals,
it starts with no one, which will greatly increase its initial overhead
and marketing costs while largely eliminating its ability to cut costs
through lower premiums.
The power and political campaign
activities of the public option proponents means that many liberal
Congresspeople feel obligated to insist that a public option be
included in the final bill. It will be a public option primarily in
name only, especially since so few people ever understood the details
of the initial proposal. Meanwhile, the Republicans and right wingers
are using the "public option" as a focal point of their criticism of
Congressional efforts for universal health care, claiming it is
socialism and a first step to single payer, an effort to drive
insurance companies out of business. Rather than saying "yes, we want
to eliminate private health insurance", Congress instead seeks to
deflate these attacks by doing more to subsidize and strengthen
insurance companies.
An additional problem is that Congress is
largely equating access to quality health care with having insurance.
Yet neither private health insurance nor even public programs like
Medicaid guarantee that you will actually obtain health services. We
see this in the fact that 77% of Americans who go bankrupt due to high
health care bills had health insurance. The co-pays, deductibles,
exclusions, prior approval and restrictions on out of network services
that come with insurance all impede access to health care. Many
Medicaid patients, due to lower physician reimbursement rates, have a
difficult time accessing health services outside of a clinic setting.
It is quite possible that the public option will experience some if not
all of these problems.
Public option proponents started with
good intentions. It is time for them to admit that their vision for a
public option has been rejected by Congress. Hopefully they will rejoin
the movement for single payer health care and fight to establish health
care as a human right in America.