Dave Lindorff: Paul Krugman's Health Care Sell-Out -- The Health 'Reform' Bill in Congress Is Worse than Nothing
Paul Krugman, one of the few liberal columnists writing for The New York Times, claims that at some point in the hoary past when he "began writing a lot about health care," he was in favor of a Canadian-style single-payer health care system. He adds that even today if he thought there was "any chance of creating Medicare for All any time in the next decade," he would be "pushing for single-payer now."
But on Christmas, Krugman threw in the towel, calling on progressives to support the Senate's version of health care legislation. Suggesting the so-called Senate Health Reform Bill, if it had been the law back in Dickens' time in England, would have saved Tiny Tim without any need for the belated charitable intervention of Ebenezer Scrooge, Krugman says progressives should recognize that the Senate bill is the best they can hope for, and that they need to accept that politics is "the art of the possible."
Krugman goes on to say that despite some "flaws and limitations," which he leaves unexplained, the Senate bill is "a big win" for progressives -- and for America.
But is it?
Certainly the Senate bill, and the only slightly less cruddy House version, with which it must be reconciled (let's be clear here that the ultimate act, when passed, will much more closely hew to the Senate version than the House version, given the number of conservative Democrats in the Senate), does a few good things, such as increasing funding for community health clinics, expanding Medicaid, the health insurance system for the poor, and banning the current insurance industry practice of denying coverage to people with pre-existing medical conditions. But these small positive steps pale in comparison to the truly noxious things this bill does, and the things it fails to do.
The most outrageous thing the health "reform" bill does is further consolidate the death grip that the insurance industry has over health care access and delivery in America. It does this by mandating that everyone buy health insurance, on pain of being slapped with a heavy fine by the IRS. Since most of the 47 million Americans without health insurance are younger and healthier than average, what this measure does is hand the private insurance industry a huge captive customer population who will be stuck with high-cost, low-benefit insurance that will generate huge profits for the industry. The industry will be further enriched by nearly half a trillion dollars in subsidies needed to help low-income people or small businesses buy their mandated health insurance -- subsidies that will end up going directly to insurance companies, which will be offering in return wretched bare-bones plans that will only cover some 60% of actual medical costs.
Supporters say that mandating that everyone have health insurance is akin to mandating that every driver of a car buy liability insurance, but there actually is a huge difference. Driving is a matter of choice. If a person doesn't want to buy car insurance, she or he can decide not to own a car. That reality at least forces auto insurers to compete in offering low-cost minimal insurance plans. Nobody can decide not to buy health insurance under this plan though. It is a historic first: a law requiring American citizens to buy a service from a private company.
Adding insult to injury, the bill does almost nothing to limit costs. This is why doctors, hospitals, drug companies, and the insurance industry, all of which spend millions of dollars lobbying for this law, love it (health insurance company shares jumped on word of Senate passage). Indeed, the government's own Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), predicts that the law, if enacted, will cause U.S. health care costs -- already the highest in the world on a per capita basis and as a share of GDP by a factor of almost two -- to rise faster than ever. Furthermore, to keep the projected costs of this bill at an alleged $871 billion over 10 years, a huge amount of money is stolen from important existing programs, including $43 billion from payments to safety-net hospitals (mostly public institutions in urban centers that serve poor populations), and from cuts in Medicare funding that could for the first time lead significant numbers of physicians to stop seeing elderly patients on Medicare.
The reform plan is terrible for other important reasons too. In order to sell it to one lone holdout Democrat, Sen. Ben Nelson of Nebraska, Senate leaders allowed strict limits to be put into the bill making it almost impossible for low-income women or families to buy insurance that includes payments for abortions. The bill also undermines trade unions by taxing, at a rate of as much as 40%, those health plans which, through years of negotiations, offered quality care to workers. As Physicians for a National Health Program (PNHP) points out, group health insurance costs are also largely driven by geographical and demographic considerations, and thus this penalty tax actually targets workplaces that employ more women, or that have older workers, or which are located in higher-cost regions such as New York or California.
But surely the worst thing about this bill is that far from putting the U.S. on a course towards some eventual humane national health system such as those that exist in the rest of the developed world, and even in many countries in the less developed world, it actually locks in the power of the insurance industry even more solidly, making achieving true health reform an even more difficult challenge than it has been.
Krugman is wrong. If the health plan envisioned by Congress had been the law of the land in Dickens' time, Tiny Tim's survival would still have been dependent upon Scrooge's largesse. If his parents did manage to buy some subsidized insurance policy (and under the Senate version, over 20 million Americans would still be left uninsured!), the deductibles and co-pays would be so high that they still would not be able to get him treated for his deadly disease, and the dark future predicted by the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come would still have befallen him and his family.
Krugman is also profoundly wrong in his gloomy prediction that there is no chance for true health care reform (as defined by expanding Medicare to cover everyone in America), any time in the next 10 years.
As the insurance industry continues to rake in obscene profits, as America's health statistics continue to plummet, and most importantly, as the huge population of Baby Boomers hits retirement age and sees their health coverage under Medicare gutted and their children and grandchildren struggling to pay for care, the stage will be set for a radical political realignment, with socialized medicine as one of its key demands.
The liberal attitude expressed by Krugman, of urging progressives to accept a tenth of a loaf, only works to push off the day of that political revolution.
DAVE LINDORFF is a Philadelphia-based journalist. He is author of "Marketplace Medicine: The Rise of the For-Profit Hospital Chains" (Bantam Books, 1992). His most recent book is "The Case for Impeachment" (St. Martin's Press, 2006). His work is available at www.thiscantbehappening.net.
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I think we can do better
I think we can do better than that, a lot better than nothing and I think this is what we should all aim. At the moment health insurance is on great debate, let's hope it's a constructive debate although at this point I think we're focusing too much on politics and too little on health. I hope now that I still have the chance to find affordable bcbs Georgia.
Mesiah?
What the dictionary definition of Emanuel? Mesiah! Very scary, that Rahm boy.
He's known for his tough guy positions, me thinks he's gotten to the lib's, tow the line or else!
Part of me would like to believe this
If only because this law is so useless, it twists the knife that is already in the backs of Americans. With no caps on rates, it can only make people more desperate. Desperate enough to _demand_ real reform? Whatever _demand_ requires? It would be nice to think so. But what became of the attempt to bring competitive pricing back into the Part D prescription plan? Maybe the old are just easy to feed upon because they are slow and feeble. Maybe this law will enrage enough people strongly enough to spur something meaningful. Maybe.
I think Carpy got to him
Or maybe he got an offer he couldn't refuse from dick Cheney, who recently built his new house within burrowing distance of CIA Headquarters in Langley, Virginia.
Entrepreneurs?
Well, my first thought is, if there is going to be all this new business for the health insurance industry, per force, then why couldn't we see some new companies starting? I mean, will the current few major health insurance companies be able to absorb all this new business? I sort of think not. Too much risk. Way too much risk. The problem with the health insurance industry right now is, it's dominated by a few large companies. I know that starting a health insurance firm is not like opening a corner grocery store, but maybe some bright person somewhere will come up with a new business model for health insurance. A new idea, you know?
This health care bill is odious to me too, but I agree with the above blogger that we gotta pass it for political reasons, if nothing else. You got Fox News and its minions blowing out all these lies for months that it's nothing but a gov't takeover of heath care, which is the opposite of what it really is, and you got all the ignorant and stupid people (the majority) believing it, so if the Dems. win and pass a bill, they win big politically. Look, I know who is on the side of the people, and it sure ain't the GOP. If the Dems. have been hijacked, then so be it. The hijackers are the enemy, not the hijackees.
A mixed bag
Sure, there's a lot not to like in the health care bill. But it's a lot like what we have in Massachusetts and we have only 4% uninsured. Better than most of the rest of the country.
If progressives/liberals/single payer advocates et al succeed in defeating this bill the happiest groups in the country will be the Republican Party, the "tea-baggers", the liars ("death panels") and the like. Now that would really be a disaster. Do we want to play into Sarah Palin's hands?????
The health insurance industry, big pharma etc will be pleased as punch if the bill goes down. They're not complaining about the present system.
This is just a start, but the door is open and won't be slammed shut again, I don't think.
Colleen Clark Cambridge, MA
Really??
The door has been closed since day one, with congress and the insurance companies on the other side. I don't see anything to like in this bill.
No single payer, no public option, and a mandate to buy a product from the same corrupt insurance agencies who own our politicians. The same insurance companies who will have tens of millions of new customers forced into their arms.
The dems bargained away everything that would've worked in favor of the American people for an Unconstitutional bill. The law as the senate passed it will not pass a Supreme Court challenge, as nowhere in the constitution does it give congress the authority to require citizens to buy a product from private corporations as a requirement to LIVE. See http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/node/48553
(Note that the powers not given to the Congress in Article 1 of the Constitution are given to the states--meaning that the US Constitution does not prevent MA from forcing it's citizens into the arms the health insurance monopoly. MA law would regulate the ability of the MA state government to impose such laws)
When the dems get voted out of power for showing that they are just as beholden to the insurance co's as the repugs, the door will more obviously be slammed shut to those of you who think this bill is better than nothing.
And honestly, do you really think the dems are going to try to fix this bill in 2010, when they stand to lose votes in the fall should the controversy continue? 2010 will be about not making waves or pressing any further on healthcare, and meanwhile, real people will continue to die and get sicker thanks to the healthcare nightmare in this country.
Medicare for all
No one is going to "fix" the health bill next year. But we might begin to tinker with it in a few more years after that - after less elapsed time between the Clinton failure and this. Everything just got worse and worse after the Clinton failure. The insurance companies paid out less in premiums and benefitted from the Wall Street, no regulations party. But if we make a start with this bill - cover more people, prevent insurance companies from denying coverage for pre-existing conditions and revoking policies as soon as someone gets sick - then fewer people will die from lack of health insurance. It's even possible that in some states the citizens will insist on local improvements.
But if this reform effort comes to nothing it will be 10-20 years before the country will tackle it again. That will really be terrible. And the Republicans will be in a much stronger electoral position in next year if this bill fails than if it passes.
The odious Joseph Lieberman must have gotten bought off big time, but just a few months ago he was on video promoting the sensible idea of expanding Medicare coverage, which could be done by first letting people get in at 55 and simulataneously enrolling babies at birth.
I'm not defending this bill but I think letting it get defeated would be much much worse.
Colleen Clark Cambridge, MA
"Tinkering" Not Worth a Tinker's Dam
By the time we get another chance to affect the laws regarding mandatory health care, we'll all be bankrupt. But being bankrupt no longer absolves one from paying off one's debt. Instead of cash payments, we'll be working off our debts to the insurance companies. Ergo, we'll be too busy slaving away lest we get sent to some debtor's prison for non-payment.
This bill has to die. There is no fixing it later.
Krugman Gives Up
I don't know how they got to him, but someone made Krugman an offer he didn't dare refuse: support the Senate bill or suffer consequences.
All across the map this seems to be going on. I doubt it's the government, for Obama doesn't like having to wield power. It has to be the private sector, for they are the only true beneficiary of the Senate bill. They know more about each of us than the government does, and they regularly collude against the majority in the interest of corporate gain.
Krugman wasn't the first sellout, nor will he be the last. We'll know when the buyoff period ends when rougher means are used to "convince" us to see things the corporate way.
re "Liberal" and Dem SELLOUTS...
Yes, it - the PURGING of genuine "Liberals" from the corridors of DC "Democrats" power - is WORSE than we see.
Rahm Emanuel & and GODDAMN-SACHS big-finance SWINDLERS, and Rahm Emanuel and the PRO-WAR NEO-CONS, are RIGHT-WING REPUBLICANS MASQUERADING as "Democrats", and they are PURGING real Democrats from office.
Proof? PRO-WAR so-called "liberal Democrats" RON KLEIN and DEBBIE WASSERMAN SCHULTZ can keep running for office, and RECEIVING GS & other "BIG DONOR" campaign funds for their 2010 campaigns... while WELL LOVED genuinely "Liberal" Democrat ROB WEXLER was FORCED TO RESIGN, his PRO-WARS & BAILOUTS big finance donors told him "NO MORE MONEY for your anti-war, regulate Wall Street"agenda !!!! http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/elections/fl-wexler-goodbye-20091225,0,1306208.story
Another Liberal Democrat, NY Congressman Rob Weiner, WAS FORCED to PULL his SINGLE-PAYER BILL from House consideration - even though it was BEING IGNORED, the mere fact that it EXISTED was TOO MUCH for the Rahm Emanuel/GoddamnSachs/obama White House to tolerate!
Barack Obama is a RIGHT-WING REPUBLICAN, running a CRIMINAL PROTECTION RACKET, for Wall Street FRAUDS & SWINDLERS, led by GoddamnSachs!
Careers?
If Ed Shultz is on-board for this scam when he returns to the air, then your hypothesis is QED. Even Randi Rhodes is spewing stuff one has trouble believing she really believes?
It has been painful listening to Hal Sparks guest-hosting Stephanie Miller's show .........strawman and ad hominem attacking those lefties who see through this flim-flam just like a rightie.
Goddamn right...
Second day in a row had to turn off Hal Sparks' pathetic snivelling. How long ago did the liberal wing succumb to the Stockholm/ beaten wife syndrome?
00,000,000 un-insured Americans to get covered
30,000,000 un-insured Americans to get covered by Obama's Bad Bill? RIGHT. Pre-Existing Conditions gone? RIGHT. Tell that to the us in 2011, after the Republicans win in 2010. Number of un-insured Americans who will ACTUALLY get covered by Obama's bad bill: ZERO. Pre-existing conditions gone?? RIGHT. Pass the bad bill for the 30,000,000 fictitious Americans who WE SAY will get covered. RIGHT. Try telling us those lies in 2011.