By BILL GEORGE
April 24, 2019
Presidential
candidate and self-described Democratic socialist Bernie Sanders currently leads the New Hampshire polls
for the Democratic nomination while campaigning on a platform that calls for
Medicare for All. Senator Kamala Harris and some other Democratic presidential
candidates are jumping on board the
Medicare for All bandwagon, which would extend the government-run health care
insurance system to all Americans.
It
is ironic that Democratic politicians, after defeating the repeal of the
Affordable Care Act (ACA) and using health care as a rallying cry to
win the majority in the House in 2018, now want to toss out ACA and the U.S.
insurance system and replace both with a government-run system.
The
stock market seems to be overreacting to these political pronouncements. UnitedHealth Group reported an
outstanding first quarter that beat expectations, with total revenue up 9%,
earnings up 22%, and increased projections for the year. Nevertheless, its
stock dropped nearly 10% in the next two
trading sessions, apparently on fears of Medicare for All. Rival insurers Cigna and Anthem dropped 11% and 8%, respectively.
Health
care cost $10,739 per
American in 2017. Middle-class and poorer Americans clearly cannot afford these
costs, nor can their employers. While offering all U.S. citizens free health
care using a single-payer system sounds attractive as a political talking
point, actually implementing Medicare for All would require a complex
restructuring of a multi-trillion dollar industry. The likely result? A
disaster.
Covering all Americans under Medicare for All could potentially
add another189 million people to the government’s
payrolls, which would swamp the current government approval and payment system—especially
since the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services require prior approval for
many medical tests and procedures. More importantly, the Medicare and Medicaid
payment system is almost entirely based on fee for service, wherein hospitals,
physicians, and pharmaceutical dispensers are paid for services rendered.
Naturally, this can incentivize doctors and hospitals to require more office
visits, do more procedures, and conduct more tests to get paid more.
These
perverse incentives are exacerbated by underpayment schedules in which Medicare
reimburses well below hospital costs. In 2017, Medicare and Medicare reimbursement was
$76.8 billion below cost and hospitals provided an additional $38.4 billion in
uncompensated care. These underpayments force hospitals to increase costs to
patients covered by commercial insurance. This cost-shifting distorts the
billing system and places an unnecessary cost burden on non-government patients
and their employers.
Medicare
for All proposes to eliminate the entire commercial
insurance industry—putting 538,600 people out
of work. The impact on the financial stability of hospitals and doctors would
be staggering. A Navigant study found that a
typical mid-sized non-profit hospital system would have a net loss of 22% under
the plan. I estimate that half of all hospitals would go out of business,
especially smaller hospitals in rural areas.
The
elimination of existing systems would be offset by a large increase in
government payrolls. A Mercatus Center study estimated
that Medicare for All would cost the federal government around $32 trillion.
These estimates do not include likely increases in Medicare and Medicaid rates
required to lessen losses to hospitals and doctors.
Who
will pay for these enormous costs? The federal government cannot cover them
without new revenue, as the current U.S. debt is already $22 trillion, with the
annual deficit exceeding $1 trillion per
year in 2020 and beyond. The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget estimates that
Medicare for All would require tripling of payroll taxes or more than doubling
all other taxes. The Mercatus Center, however, found that
“doubling all federal individual and corporate income taxes going forward would
be insufficient to fully finance the plan.”
It
is easy for voters to support the plan if they think they will get their health
care for free, but when they realize their taxes will increase, approval drops
dramatically. A Kaiser Family Foundation poll found that net
favorability to Medicare for All is negative 23% with when participants hear it
would require increases to taxes, and a staggering negative 44% when people
hear it would cause delays in getting tests and procedures.
Rather
than toss out our current system of health care insurance for a government-run
system, it is time to find ways to further improve the ACA. Here are a few
proposals to do that:
First,
there should be a shift from “fee for service” to “pay for value,” thus
reducing the total cost of the patient’s care.
Second,
shift more government-covered people to Medicare Advantage, whereby private
insurers receive a sum of money to manage their patients annually.
Third,
put a greater emphasis on healthy living. I estimate that over 50% of health
care costs are the result of unhealthy lifestyles such as unhealthy eating and
drinking, lack of exercise, and stress. Greater focus on these areas would
prevent people from getting sick in the first place and accelerate healing when
they are ill.
Fourth,
expand Medicaid coverage to more people experiencing economic difficulties and
provide adequate health care before their conditions become severe and they
wind up in the emergency room.
Fifth,
revise the ACA to permit the federal government to negotiate drug prices with
pharmaceutical companies, while enabling streamlined distribution of drugs from
manufacturers to patients with certified physician prescriptions. This would
reduce the rapid escalation in drug prices since ACA was enacted.
Sixth,
enhance the insurance exchanges by permitting a public option. This would
provide increased price competition in the exchanges, lowering costs for
families purchasing insurance on the market.
Instead
of unrealistic debates about Medicare for All, we should focus on ways to
improve our current system, reduce health care costs, and make the Affordable
Care Act work effectively for all Americans.
Bill
George is a senior fellow at Harvard Business School and former chair and CEO
of Medtronic. He serves on the board of Goldman Sachs and previously served on
the boards of Mayo Clinic, ExxonMobil, Novartis, and Target.
This
article is commentary.
http://fortune.com/2019/04/24/medicare-for-all-plan-costs/
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