Health Care Destruction
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/06/opinion/06krugman.html?_r=1&th&emc=th&oref=slogin
Sarah Palin ended her debate performance last Thursday with a slightly
garbled quote from Ronald Reagan about how, if we aren’t vigilant,
we’ll end up “telling our children and our children’s children” about
the days when America was free. It was a revealing choice.

You see, when Reagan said this he wasn’t warning about Soviet
aggression. He was warning against legislation that would guarantee
health care for older Americans — the program now known as Medicare.

Conservative Republicans still hate Medicare, and would kill it if
they could — in fact, they tried to gut it during the Clinton years
(that’s what the 1995 shutdown of the government was all about). But
so far they haven’t been able to pull that off.

So John McCain wants to destroy the health insurance of nonelderly
Americans instead.

Most Americans under 65 currently get health insurance through their
employers. That’s largely because the tax code favors such insurance:
your employer’s contribution to insurance premiums isn’t considered
taxable income, as long as the employer’s health plan follows certain
rules. In particular, the same plan has to be available to all
employees, regardless of the size of their paycheck or the state of
their health.

This system does a fairly effective job of protecting those it
reaches, but it leaves many Americans out in the cold. Workers whose
employers don’t offer coverage are forced to seek individual health
insurance, often in vain. For one thing, insurance companies offering
“nongroup” coverage generally refuse to cover anyone with a pre-
existing medical condition. And individual insurance is very
expensive, because insurers spend large sums weeding out “high-risk”
applicants — that is, anyone who seems likely to actually need the
insurance.

So what should be done? Barack Obama offers incremental reform:
regulation of insurers to prevent discrimination against the less
healthy, subsidies to help lower-income families buy insurance, and
public insurance plans that compete with the private sector. His plan
falls short of universal coverage, but it would sharply reduce the
number of uninsured.

Mr. McCain, on the other hand, wants to blow up the current system, by
eliminating the tax break for employer-provided insurance. And he
doesn’t offer a workable alternative.

Without the tax break, many employers would drop their current health
plans. Several recent nonpartisan studies estimate that under the
McCain plan around 20 million Americans currently covered by their
employers would lose their health insurance.

As compensation, the McCain plan would give people a tax credit —
$2,500 for an individual, $5,000 for a family — that could be used to
buy health insurance in the individual market. At the same time, Mr.
McCain would deregulate insurance, leaving insurance companies free to
deny coverage to those with health problems — and his proposal for a
“high-risk pool” for hard cases would provide little help.

So what would happen?

The good news, such as it is, is that more people would buy individual
insurance. Indeed, the total number of uninsured Americans might
decline marginally under the McCain plan — although many more
Americans would be without insurance than under the Obama plan.

But the people gaining insurance would be those who need it least:
relatively healthy Americans with high incomes. Why? Because insurance
companies want to cover only healthy people, and even among the
healthy only those able to pay a lot in addition to their tax credit
would be able to afford coverage (remember, it’s a $5,000 credit, but
the average family policy actually costs more than $12,000).

Meanwhile, the people losing insurance would be those who need it
most: lower-income workers who wouldn’t be able to afford individual
insurance even with the tax credit, and Americans with health problems
whom insurance companies won’t cover.

And in the process of comforting the comfortable while afflicting the
afflicted, the McCain plan would also lead to a huge, expensive
increase in bureaucracy: insurers selling individual health plans
spend 29 percent of the premiums they receive on administration,
largely because they employ so many people to screen applicants. This
compares with costs of 12 percent for group plans and just 3 percent
for Medicare.

In short, the McCain plan makes no sense at all, unless you have faith
that the magic of the marketplace can solve all problems. And Mr.
McCain does: a much-quoted article published under his name declares
that “Opening up the health insurance market to more vigorous
nationwide competition, as we have done over the last decade in
banking, would provide more choices of innovative products less
burdened by the worst excesses of state-based regulation.”

I agree: the McCain plan would do for health care what deregulation
has done for banking. And I’m terrified.

More Articles in Opinion » A version of this article appeared in print
on October 6, 2008, on page A29 of the New York edition.
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