By
Sally
Pipes | Fox News 10/27/2019
Sen.
Elizabeth Warren says she will release a plan to pay for Medicare-for-all after
sidestepping questions about raising taxes to fund the plan.
Last
week, Sen. Elizabeth Warren promised to release her plan to pay
for "Medicare-for-all."
Throughout
her campaign, Warren has come under fire for refusing to say whether she would
raise taxes on the middle class to fund her health care plan. Many of her
fellow Democrats — including "Medicare-for-all" architect Bernie Sanders — have made clear that the plan would
require tax hikes for everyone.
But
Warren isn't just dodging the tax question. Like all "Medicare-for-all" supporters, she's misleading the
public about the damage her plan would do to the finances and health of every
American.
Even
"Medicare-for-all" supporters acknowledge it would be pricey. A new
report from the left-leaning Urban Institute predicts the plan would cost $34
trillion over its first decade. Sanders has said that it could cost up to $40
trillion over 10 years.
That's
more than the cost of Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security combined.
Warren
claims she can finance "Medicare-for-all" by taxing the rich. But
aggressively taxing wealthy individuals and corporations would only generate
enough revenue to cover 40 percent of the cost of "Medicare-for-all,"
according to a new study by the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.
That's
why Sanders has floated a number of new taxes on almost every single American,
including a 4 percent tax on each household and a 7.5 percent payroll tax.
Sanders claims Americans would pay less for health care under "Medicare-for-all"
than they currently do, even taking into account their higher tax burden.
Warren has promised something similar — that "Medicare-for-all" would
"lower costs for middle-class families."
According
to an analysis by an Emory University professor, 70 percent of working,
privately insured Americans would pay more for health insurance under a
single-payer, "Medicare-for-all" system than they do today.
But the
evidence suggests otherwise. According to an analysis by Emory University
professor Kenneth E. Thorpe, 70 percent of working, privately insured Americans
would pay more for health insurance under a single-payer,
"Medicare-for-all" system than they do today.
They'd
face even higher taxes if "Medicare-for-all" wound up costing more
than projected. It wouldn't be the first time budget experts underestimated the
cost of a government insurance program. In 1967, the House Ways and Means
Committee predicted that the newly created Medicare program would cost around
$12 billion by 1990.
Medicare
spending actually reached $110 billion in 1990.
"Medicare-for-all"
advocates claim that the focus on its cost to the federal government is
disingenuous. We're already spending well over $3 trillion a year on health
care. The Warren/Sanders plan would relieve individuals and employers of that
spending — and re-apportion it to the federal government.
Sanders
and his allies like to cite a study from the libertarian Mercatus Center, which
assumes that "Medicare-for-all" will adopt the existing Medicare
program's low payment rates — and thus save the country $2 trillion over a
decade.
Of
course, extending Medicare's payment schedule across the entire health care
system would reduce payments to doctors and hospitals by 40 percent, relative
to private insurance. And it would raise demand for care by 11 percent.
In
other words, "Medicare-for-all" posits that doctors and hospitals
will have no qualms about treating more patients for less money.
It's
more likely that doctors and hospitals will respond to lower payment rates by
reducing the supply of care they're willing to deliver. Americans would find
themselves in the same position as patients in the United Kingdom's
government-run National Health Service, where more than 4 million are currently
waiting for care.
Those
Britons pay an awful lot to wait in line. The average household in the United
Kingdom pays over £5,000 in taxes each year just for health insurance. That's
an increase of 75 percent since 2000. And it's likely to rise further. Two
British think tanks predict that each British household will have to pay an
additional £2,000 per year to keep the NHS running as the population ages.
The
American people are unlikely to reward politicians who raise their taxes by
thousands of dollars — and then tell them to get in line for health care.
Perhaps that's why Warren has been uncharacteristically mum on her plan for
paying for "Medicare-for-all."
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/sally-pipes-warren-misleads-harm-medicare-for-all
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