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One
Nation, Uninsured
New York Times Article
By
PAUL
KRUGMAN
Harry Truman tried to create a national health insurance
system. Public opinion was initially on his side:
Jill Quadagno's book "One Nation, Uninsured"
tells us that in 1945, 75 percent of Americans favored
national health insurance. If Truman had succeeded,
universal coverage for everyone, not just the elderly,
would today be an accepted part of the social contract.
But Truman failed. Special interests, especially
the American Medical Association and Southern politicians
who feared that national insurance would lead to racially
integrated hospitals, triumphed.
Sixty years later, the patchwork system that evolved
in the absence of national health insurance is unraveling.
The cost of health care is exploding, the number of
uninsured is growing, and corporations that still
provide employee coverage are groaning under the strain.
So the time will soon be ripe for another try at
universal coverage. Public opinion is already favorable:
a 2003 Pew poll found that 72 percent of Americans
favored government-guaranteed health insurance for
all.
But special interests will, once again, stand in
the way. And the big debate among would-be reformers
is how to deal with those interests, especially the
insurance companies. These companies played a secondary
role in Truman's failure but have since become a seemingly
invincible lobby.
Let's ignore those who believe that private medical
accounts - basically tax shelters for the healthy
and wealthy - can solve our health care problems through
the magic of the marketplace. The intellectually serious
debate is between those who believe that the government
should simply provide basic health insurance for everyone
and those proposing a more complex, indirect approach
that preserves a central role for private health insurance
companies.
A system in which the government provides universal
health insurance is often referred to as "single
payer," but I like Ted Kennedy's slogan "Medicare
for all." It reminds voters that America already
has a highly successful, popular single-payer program,
albeit only for the elderly. It shows that we're talking
about government insurance, not government-provided
health care. And it makes it clear that like Medicare
(but unlike Canada's system), a U.S. national health
insurance system would allow individuals with the
means and inclination to buy their own medical care.
The great advantage of universal, government-provided
health insurance is lower costs. Canada's government-run
insurance system has much less bureaucracy and much
lower administrative costs than our largely private
system. Medicare has much lower administrative costs
than private insurance. The reason is that single-payer
systems don't devote large resources to screening
out high-risk clients or charging them higher fees.
The savings from a single-payer system would probably
exceed $200 billion a year, far more than the cost
of covering all of those now uninsured.
Nonetheless, most reform proposals out there - even
proposals from liberal groups like the Century Foundation
and the Center for American Progress - reject a simple
single-payer approach. Instead, they call for some
combination of mandates and subsidies to help everyone
buy insurance from private insurers.
Some people, not all of them right-wingers, fear
that a single-payer system would hurt innovation.
But the main reason these proposals give private insurers
a big role is the belief that the insurers must be
appeased.
That belief is rooted in recent history. Bill Clinton's
health care plan failed in large part because of a
dishonest but devastating lobbying and advertising
campaign financed by the health insurance industry
- remember Harry and Louise? And the lesson many people
took from that defeat is that any future health care
proposal must buy off the insurance lobby.
But I think that's the wrong lesson. The Clinton
plan actually preserved a big role for private insurers;
the industry attacked it all the same. And the plan's
complexity, which was largely a result of attempts
to placate interest groups, made it hard to sell to
the public. So I would argue that good economics is
also good politics: reformers will do best with a
straightforward single-payer plan, which offers maximum
savings and, unlike the Clinton plan, can easily be
explained.
We need to do this one right. If reform fails again,
we'll be on the way to a radically unequal society,
in which all but the most affluent Americans face
the constant risk of financial ruin and even premature
death because they can't pay their medical bills.
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