Posted on 02/20/2017 7:03:22 AM PST by Kaslin
Republicans agree that Obamacare has failed and must be repealed. But they cant agree on the replacement plan.
The one thing they shouldnt do is devise another grand scheme like the Obama plan. The answer is not a new and better big government plan. Instead, the president and Congress should take specific actions to free the market so patients and providers can create a health care system that serves everyone.
When President Barack Obama proposed his federal takeover of the healthcare system, he was right about one thing: American medical care was a mess. Government provided half the funding, created incentives for cost-plus care, and pushed insurance onto employers. While care cost more than it should for many, some people didnt have access to the treatment they needed.
But instead of seeking to empower patients by giving them greater control over their own futures and more opportunities to find the best care possible in the marketplace, the president and Democrats in Congress took medical decisions away from the public and transferred them to Washington.
Unsurprisingly, that approach didnt work. Insurers, mandated to discard actuarial principles in order to cover patients with serious pre-existing conditions, were forced to offer one-size-fits-all policies to cover everything from falling hair to sex change procedures. No wonder the cost of health insurance spiked. People got stuck paying for benefits they didnt want.
Washingtons coverage mandates forced companies to cancel health insurance plans that employees had relied on for years. Patients were lucky to find replacements, and usually ended up paying a lot more for a lot less. Having coverage did not mean having access to care.
Young, healthy people who were supposed to sign up in greater numbers and pay a lot more to subsidize their well-off elders, understandably chose not to do so.
Insurance companies were stuck serving a sicker population, causing them to lose money and drop plans. The promises of Obamacare proved to be false.
Republicans correctly believe the misguided law must be repealed. But what to replace it with, they ask.
The answer is nothing. At least, not in the sense of another comprehensive government program to set insurance requirements, mandate coverage, fix outcomes, and the like. Misguided government intervention created the health care mess weve got. Its time we allow economic incentives and free market principles to solve the problem.
The solution is to free the market to innovate and experiment, to find the best way to provide quality coverage for less cost. For example, health insurers should have a national marketplace. Let people buy medical plans across state lines like every other kind of insurance. And bar states from imposing special interest coverage mandates that raise health insurance premiums for everyone.
Moreover, employees, not employers, should control their health insurance coverage. After all, none of us expects our company to buy us homeowners or auto insurance. The tax deduction could be shifted to individuals from businesses, or eliminated entirely with an equivalent individual income tax cut. Tax-free contributions to health savings accounts would enable people to finance the level of risk theyd be comfortable with.
The market today doesnt have the flexibility to offer an answer, so government must get out of the way and encourage the private sector to do so. Those of limited means could be subsidized through vouchers to purchase their own private insurance. State high-risk pools could provide access to care for people with chronic or pre-existing conditions.
Medicaid needs to focus on the poor who have nowhere else to turn. Reform should emphasize allowing the states to provide better care for their most needy citizens without interference or mandates from Washington. States that do the best job will serve as models for others. Doctors who reject Washingtons cut-rate reimbursement rates need to be encouraged to re-enter the Medicare and Medicaid patient markets.
None of these measures constitutes a plan as such. Instead they each address a particular problem. In some cases they eliminate regulatory and tax barriers. In others they repair bad government incentives. In some instances they reward employers and providers of care to fill health care gaps.
The emphasis should be on addressing the individual problems in a coordinated manner. A workable reform requires targeted fixes designed to work interdependently, instead of one big plan requiring so many political compromises and tradeoffs that it would be doomed from the start.
Its particularly important to get the principles and language right. We need to change the way policymakers think. Centralized government solutions dont work regardless of who designs them.
We also need to change peoples expectations. The government should be the backstop for those without other options, not the protector of first resort.
The disaster called Obamacare provides an important reminder that we ignore at our peril. It is a fact that even the most well-intentioned programs designed by politicians and run by federal bureaucrats do not work. We cant afford to ignore the lessons weve learned.
Instead, we need to restore and build on market principles that we know work, emphasizing the pragmatic over the ideological, and adapting to reality, not the world we wish existed.
People are suffering, so Congress needs to fix health care now. But not by repeating Obamacares ham-handed approach. Instead, policymakers should adopt a collection of logical steps to enable the marketplace to innovate and meet the diverse health care needs of the American people.
All of which did not address the point. Gold and silver people love to talk about it, but the only thing you CAN talk about is what exists, and gold and silver are not used to run society. There is no gold slot in cash register drawers. It’s not used. Period.
And so, the point remains. Relying on “the free market” to address health care cannot mean anything, because QE destroyed the integrity of money.
You might not be aware of it, but once you are on Social Security, usually by age 65 you will be put automatically on medicare, whether you like it or not.
Yours is the better rebuttal. But it relies mostly on momentum and a desire to believe in normalcy, though you do admit QE probably has destroyed money’s meaning (rephrase).
As for locality and USA, and not wanting to change the subject, but oil comes from outside. 20 million bpd burned in the US, and we produce only 9.5. The rest comes in, paid for by meaningless money. What happens when a decision is made to insist on something other than meaningless money to pay for the ultimate meaning, civilization’s lifeblood, oil.
This all just further undercuts money and what it defines for a free market that is alleged to be the solution to healthcare.
No way.
But different income tax rates for different groups is perfectly ok.
“Leave Obamacare to fail all on its own”
To repeal obamacare one need only repeal it’s enforcement mechanisms and it will die on its own.
Congress wants to cut deals with lobbyists buy stock in favored companies they choose to enrich themselves and otherwise play business as usual.
That takes more time than most people have.
Do whatever it takes to make sane business transactions legal in medicine and insurance. The rest will happen on its own
I think anything else is crazy, but not this idea :-)
When a poor person goes to the hospital emergency room for a bad cold the taxpayers get billed thousands of dollars for the visit. Sometimes in cash - sometimes in tax write-offs for the hospital. WE PAY FOR THOSE WRITE OFFS IN LOST TAXES.
When a doctor walks into a nursing home with medicaid patients and spends 5 minutes looking over a few charts the nurses have set out for him (and might actually look at ONE patient) he charges the top dollar amount allowed for EVERY patient in the facility. NOT JUST THE ONE PERSON HE SAW BUT FOR EVERY PERSON. Five minutes work - thousands of dollars.
We're being taken to the cleaners with this ‘health care’ carp because lobbyist are 'bribing' the folks who write the laws on health care... Over 90% of the money the average person spends on health care they'll spend in the last 6 months of their life. That's the doctor jackpot. Yep and lots of doctors do their morning walk through a hospital picking up thousands of dollars by writing a few meaningless words on a chart.
Unless you're willing to let people die in the street if they don't have the cash to pay for service on the spot - we need to come up with a realistic plan that's not a taxpayer ripoff - because we're paying through the nose now.
Obama destroyed the working people’s healthcare by breaking up the employer based systems. The big corporations are glad that it is gone and to get it back will be near impossible.
The word scheme carries a negative connotation. < /word police >
Commie
You’re implying that the integrity of the FRN has something to do with its use as a medium of exchange. It doesn’t at this point and probably won’t until inflation is north of 7-10%.
The health care industry has been given a pass on complying with Title 15 for decades. It would be managed by the free market within weeks if that were enforced. Unfortunately no one is going to want to nut up and take the grief over the subsequent 20+% GDP hit.
We’re paying now - and we’re paying MORE because the health care system for the poor is so corrupt.
When a poor person goes to the hospital emergency room for a bad cold the taxpayers get billed thousands of dollars for the visit. Sometimes in cash - sometimes in tax write-offs for the hospital. WE PAY FOR THOSE WRITE OFFS IN LOST TAXES.
When a doctor walks into a nursing home with medicaid patients and spends 5 minutes looking over a few charts a nurse set out for him he charges the MAXIMUM amount Medicaid allowes for EVERY patient in the facility. NOT JUST THE ONE PERSON HE SAW BUT FOR EVERY PERSON. Five minutes work - thousands of dollars.
We’re being taken to the cleaners with this health care carp because lobbyist are ‘bribing/donating’ to the folks who write laws on health care...
Over 90% of the money the average person spends on health care is spent in the last 6 months of their life. That’s the doctor jackpot. Yep and lots of doctors do their morning walk through a hospital picking up thousands of dollars by writing a few meaningless words on a chart.
Unless you’re willing to let people die in the street if they don’t have the cash to pay for service on the spot - we need to come up with a realistic plan that’s not a taxpayer ripoff - because we’re paying through the nose now.
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