03/20/10
From National Review
March 20, 2010 7:00 A.M.
Predictions
Our future under Obamacare.
Michael Tanner
The crystal ball is still far too cloudy to predict whether or not Obamacare
will pass, but it is not too soon to make some predictions about what the future
will look like if it does pass.
The bill will cost more than advertised. It won’t be long before Congress is
shocked — shocked! — to discover that health-care reform is going to cost a lot
more than expected. It’s not just the budgetary gimmicks that Democrats have
been employing to hide the bill’s true cost. It’s also that government programs
— and government health-care programs in particular — almost always end up
exceeding their cost estimates.
For example, when Medicare was instituted in 1965, it was estimated that the
cost of Medicare Part A would be $9 billion by 1990. In actuality, it was seven
times higher — $67 billion. Similarly, in 1987, Medicaid’s special hospitals
subsidy was projected to cost $100 million annually by 1992, just five years
later; it actually cost $11 billion, more than 100 times as much. And in 1988,
when Medicare’s home-care benefit was established, the projected cost for 1993
was $4 billion, but the actual cost in 1993 was $10 billion.
Insurance premiums will keep rising. The president has tried to convince people
that health-care reform will cut their insurance costs. They are in for a
surprise. According to the Congressional Budget Office, insurance premiums will
double in the next few years. The bill will do nothing to diminish that
increase. In fact, for the millions of Americans who get their insurance through
the individual market, rather than from an employer, this bill will raise
premiums by 10–13 percent more than if we do nothing. Young and healthy people
can expect their premiums to go up even more.
The quality of care will be worse. Doctors’ reimbursements for providing care
will be squeezed, making it harder to find a doctor. A new survey in the New
England Journal of Medicine reports that 46 percent of doctors may give up their
practice in the wake of this bill. While that is probably exaggerated, many
doctors will likely decide to reduce their patient loads or retire. At the same
time, increased demand will create additional problems.
In Massachusetts, after the passage of Romneycare, the wait to see a
primary-care physician increased from 33 to 52 days. Research and development
will also be cut back, meaning there will be fewer new drugs and other medical
breakthroughs. And the government will increasingly intervene in medical
decision making, micromanaging medical decisions and deciding what treatments
are most effective or, frighteningly, most cost-effective.
The Left will keep pushing for more. Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s inner censor was
clearly on the fritz this week when she said, “Once we kick through this door,
there’ll be more legislation to follow.” Faced with rising costs and higher
premiums, not to mention millions still uninsured, Democrats will blame the
“evil” insurance companies and demand further reform. They will argue that we
tried “moderate” reform and failed. Pelosi could no longer keep a lid on what
the hard Left has been restraining itself from saying all along: It sees this
legislation as the perfect first step in the long march to universal
single-payer health care.
Republicans won’t really try to repeal it. Republicans will run this fall on a
promise to repeal this deeply unpopular bill, and will likely reap the political
advantages of that promise. But in reality there is little chance of their
following through. Even if Republicans were to take both houses of Congress,
they would still face a presidential veto and a Democratic filibuster.
But more important, once an entitlement is in place, it becomes virtually
impossible to take away. The fact that Republicans have been criticizing
Obamacare for cutting Medicare shows that they are not really willing to take
the heat for cutting people’s benefits once they have them — no matter how
unaffordable those benefits are. Paul Ryan put forth a serious plan for
entitlement reform — and attracted just six co-sponsors at last count. Enough
said.
As Scrooge asked in A Christmas Carol, “Are these the shadows of the things that
will be, or are they shadows of things that may be?” By Sunday night, we should
know.
— Michael Tanner is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and co-author of
Healthy Competition: What’s Holding Back Health Care and How to Free It.
* * * * *
Yeah, your taxes are going to go up a little, well actually a lot; but that's a small price to pay to provide proper medical care to all those ghetto people who can't find jobs because of their illiteracy, criminal background, drug or alcohol addictions or their aversion to work. And how about all those waves of illegal immigrants, including jihadis who want to transform this country into a 7th century caliphate like the shithole they came from. Congress says they're entitled to free medical care and you have to pay for it.
What's that? You say you're old, white and disabled? Well, you are using valuable resources that are needed by the illegal aliens and ghetto residents who are building the New USA. Report to your doctor immediately for end-of-life counseling. You acquired your disability in military service while fighting Communism? So you're a right-wing terrorist too? The FBI and DHS will be contacting you, you may not need a euthanasia pill.
"The time for talking is over..."
