Adriana Belmonte Associate Editor
Yahoo
Finance May 10, 2019
Health care is becoming a main point of
contention as the U.S. gears up for the 2020 presidential election. Several Democratic presidential candidates, including
Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-VT)
and Kamala Harris (D-CA),
have called for Medicare for all,
while Republican politicians like Mitch McConnell are in favor of cutting health care
spending.
Medicare, along with Medicaid and Social
Security, are the largest expenses in the U.S. And according to eHealth CEO
Scott Flanders, this is “all the more reason” why an idea like Medicare for all
is “nearly irrational” to discuss.
“You’re already saying that it’s a challenge
to fund what we’ve already committed to our seniors,” Flanders said on Yahoo
Finance’s On the Move. “So, to layer on another 180 million people outside of
the employer market into Medicare would just collapse the system.”
Sanders bill ‘would
actually outlaw all private insurance’
The Congressional Budget Office stated in
a May 2019 report that a single-payer health care system
transition “could be complicated, challenging, and potentially disruptive.”
As it stands, approximately 156
million Americans are insured through their employer, while another 21 million
are insured through the private market. At the same time, more and more
Americans are becoming uninsured
in the Trump era.
In Sanders’ proposal, Americans would gain universal health care coverage, while employers
would be prohibited from providing separate plans. However, it would also
require at least $3 trillion a year in new government revenue, as Yahoo
Finance previously
reported, leading to higher corporate and individual taxes.
“The bill that’s been promulgated by Bernie
Sanders would actually outlaw all private insurance,” Flanders said. “So, 180
million employer-insured individuals and families would lose the insurance they
have now.
He added: “We think it’s highly unlikely that
that’s a realistic prospect, but there will still always be a private insurance
market for the treatments that aren’t covered by a government plan.”
Rising health
care costs have become a major issue in the country. In fact, a
recent Gallup poll indicated that 55% of the country worries “a
great deal” about the affordability and accessibility of health care.
‘It’s just so
Byzantine’
Part of America’s issue with health care
involves prescription drug prices — in 2015, those accounted for 17% of all
health care costs. Flanders, though, doesn’t want to place the blame there.
“It’s easy to attack the pharmaceutical
industry,” he said. “But, it’s important to remember they only represent 10% of
the total cost of health care, and the medications they create solve and cure a
lot of diseases. So, I’m personally resistant, even though they’re an
attractive whipping boy, to go after them.”
Pharmacy benefit management systems “have
increased the cost savings by negotiating volume discounts,” Flanders said.
“But, they also bring an additional layer of expense into the system. That’s
the challenge with the ecosystem of health care today — it’s just so Byzantine
and complicated [that] it’s hard to know where to go attack the costs.”
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/medicare-for-all-cost-123203720.html
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