Christopher Holt May 2, 2019
The Big
Picture
On May 1,
the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) published a report entitled “Key Design Components
and Considerations for Establishing a Single-Payer Health Care System,”
written at the request of House Budget Committee Chairman John Yarmuth. The
report is not a score of H.R.1384 (the Medicare for All Act of 2019 that is a
variation of Senator Bernie Sanders’s proposal), or any other specific piece of
legislation. As such, the report does not delve into the types of cost
estimates one might anticipate from CBO, and there are no headline-grabbing
pronouncements about trillions in new federal outlays.
Instead
the report primarily curates many of the outstanding questions surrounding a
single-payer system. While the report may not have been the boon for which
advocates were hoping, nor the knockout blow opponents were anticipating,
policymakers can glean a wealth of scoring signals to inform how single-payer
legislation is crafted going forward. What follows are eight notable takeaways
from the report.
Key
Takeaways
- No
Topline Cost Estimate, but Single-Payer Will Score Big
As alluded
to above, there is no topline federal spending dollar figure because CBO did
not undertake to score a single-payer proposal, but CBO did indicate such a
bill would come with a big price tag. Perhaps the most significant, though by
no means unexpected, takeaway from the report is this sentence: “In a federally
administered single-payer system, the associated cash flows would be federal
transactions, in CBO’s view, and the spending and revenues for the system would
appear in the federal budget.”
There are
essentially two ways to think about cost: expenses to the federal government
alone, and system-wide spending from both public and private sources. In the
report, CBO seems relatively agnostic on whether a single-payer system would
increase or decrease total national spending on health care. It contends that
total spending depends on both the specifics of a proposal and, more important,
the myriad ways various actors might respond to a single-payer system.
Nevertheless,
if CBO scored a single-payer proposal, it would conclude such a plan is
extremely expensive to the federal government, regardless of whether total
national spending on health care increased, decreased, or stayed static. That
total number matters from a political and procedural perspective. In other
words, there may be no headline-grabbing dollar figure attached to this report,
but there would be to a legislative score.
- Little
Discussion of Broader Economic Effects
CBO is
largely silent on the broader economic impacts of shifting the United States to
a publicly financed, single-payer system. The report’s authors spend little
more than a paragraph grappling with the potential implications of entirely
remaking almost one-sixth of the nation’s economy. The authors do raise some of
these issues—acknowledging likely effects on labor supply and employee
compensation, as well as questions about what happens to employees of large
insurers and other workers whose jobs may not translate to the new system—but
then declare them “beyond the scope of this report.” One would expect any
actual legislative score would need to address these wider economic and
labor-market impacts, but House Democrats have changed the rules for CBO and no
longer require dynamic scoring of legislative proposals. While it is unfortunate
the report does not further explore these questions, it is not terribly
surprising.
- Lower
Administrative Costs
CBO
clearly signals that it will credit a single-payer proposal with savings from
lower administrative costs when compared to the current multipayer system. It
notes that administrative costs for Medicare fee-for-service (Parts A and B)
are only 1.4 percent, compared to 6 percent for Medicare Advantage and Part D
and 12 percent under private insurance. It also postulates that single-payer “would
probably have lower administrative costs…because it would consolidate
administrative tasks and eliminate insurer’s profits.” The report further
notes, however, that the specifics of the eventual proposal will affect the
degree to which administrative savings are achieved.
- CBO
is Wary of Increased Utilization
The
report highlights the delicate balance between providing comprehensive coverage
and dramatically increasing utilization. While the most ambitious single-payer
proposals envision a system without patient out-of-pocket costs, CBO expresses
concern that such an arrangement could lead to markedly higher rates of health
care utilization, driving up costs to the government. It notes on several
instances that cost-sharing requirements or other utilization management tools
would be key to restraining spending. This should put legislators on notice:
Particularly generous benefit packages with minimal barriers to care or few if
any direct costs for patients are likely to incur higher overall cost scores from
CBO. The report does make some suggestions for thinking about cost-sharing
requirements, such as varying rates of cost-sharing based on the type of care
being received. But it also notes that complex, value-based cost-sharing will
increase administrative costs.
- Long-Term
Services and Supports (LTSS) Would Be Expensive
Recent
proposals, including H.R. 1384, have included long-term care services within
the single-payer system’s benefit package. CBO anticipates big costs associated
with such benefits. The report states, “public spending would increase
substantially relative to current spending if everyone received LTSS benefits.”
CBO argues that the increased cost here would reflect more than just a transfer
of private spending to public spending, because in some instances family
members are currently meeting each other’s long-term care needs without
compensation. It also points out that even without an expansion of long-term
care, existing programs will likely see increased spending as people who are
currently eligible but unenrolled become aware of their eligibility amid the
flurry of health reform information. This expected dynamic is akin to the “woodwork effect” that occurred after the
Affordable Care Act expanded Medicaid, as many people who had previously been
eligible signed up for the first time even though nothing related to their
status had changed under the new law.
- CBO
Is Still Dubious About Direct Government Negotiations for Prescription
Drugs
CBO
has long held that direct negotiations
between the government and drug manufacturers over the prices of drugs
purchased through the Medicare program are unlikely to yield savings. CBO has
argued before that, short of simply mandating drug prices—which has a host of
other problematic implications—the government would have little leverage in
negotiations. Without a formulary—and the corresponding leverage of favorable
or unfavorable placement on that formulary, or outright exclusion from the
formulary—the government would have little to offer manufactures in exchange
for lower prices. CBO has also indicated in the past that it sees political
pressure as a barrier to lawmakers or administration officials outright
rejecting medications that patients want.
The
report restates these concerns in regard to a single-payer system. It notes
that “it is uncertain whether the single-payer plan could use the threat of
excluding certain drugs from the formulary as a negotiating strategy. It is
also unclear whether a single-payer plan could withstand the political pressure
that might result from excluding some drugs.” Looking more broadly at drug
pricing, CBO seems uncertain of the implications of most options for
structuring drug payments in a single-payer system. How that uncertainty would
affect a legislative score is unclear.
- Multipayer
Systems and a Continuing Role for Private Insurance
For a
report on single-payer health care, CBO spends a substantial amount of time
discussing multipayer-system alternatives and contemplating various ways for
private insurance to continue to function even in a single-payer environment.
In fact, two entire pages of the report are given over to policy ideas for
achieving universal coverage through the current multipayer system, rather than
shifting to a single-payer system.
- Questions,
Questions, and More Questions
The final
observation from the CBO report on single-payer health care is just how many
outstanding questions the report raises. Every single section title in the
report ends with a question mark, and most of the report is simply a recitation
of all the uncertainties. How will providers be paid? Who will own hospitals?
Would the system be entirely federally managed, or would it be a federal/state
partnership more akin to Medicaid? Who would determine covered services, and on
what basis? In one section, CBO drills down on how decisions about new
treatments will be made and questions the potential impact on access to
innovative medical breakthroughs under a single-payer system. As much as
single-payer—or “Medicare for All”—has dominated the policy conversation in
recent months, it’s striking how much uncertainty there still is around the
specifics.
Conclusion
While the
CBO single-payer report is an excellent resource for policy wonks going
forward, it is hardly a bombshell. Its political and messaging significance is
likely minimal, beyond potentially a few quotes pulled out of context. Nor will
the report shake up the policy landscape or debate over single-payer. Its real
significance lies in the insights it provides policymakers into how CBO might
view various policy options when scoring single-payer legislation at a later
date.
https://www.americanactionforum.org/insight/what-the-congressional-budget-office-just-said-about-single-payer/#ixzz5n9LT6id4
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