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Democratic Primaries

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BeckyDem

(8,361 posts)
Wed Oct 16, 2019, 11:03 PM Oct 2019

The 'Public Option' on Health Care Is a Poison Pill [View all]

Last edited Wed Oct 16, 2019, 11:58 PM - Edit history (1)

Some Democratic candidates are pushing it as a free-choice version of Medicare for All. That’s good rhetoric but bad policy.
By David U. Himmelstein and Steffie Woolhandler
October 7, 2019

Health care reform has been the most hotly contested issue in the Democratic presidential debates. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren have been pushing a single-payer Medicare for All plan, under which a public insurer would cover everyone. They would ban private insurance, except for items not covered by the public plan, such as cosmetic surgery or private rooms in hospitals. The other Democratic contenders favor a “public option” reform that would introduce a Medicare-like public insurer but would allow private insurers to operate as well. They tout this approach as a less traumatic route to universal coverage that would preserve a free choice of insurers for people happy with their plans. And some public option backers go further, claiming that the system would painlessly transition to single payer as the public plan outperforms the private insurers.


That’s comforting rhetoric. But the case for a public option rests on faulty economic logic and naive assumptions about how private insurance actually works. Private insurers have proved endlessly creative at gaming the system to avoid fair competition, and they have used their immense lobbying clout to undermine regulators’ efforts to rein in their abuses. That’s enabled them to siphon hundreds of billions of dollars out of the health care system each year for their own profits and overhead costs while forcing doctors and hospitals to waste billions more on billing-related paperwork.

Those dollars have to come from somewhere. If private insurers required their customers to pay the full costs of private plans, they wouldn’t be able to compete with a public plan like the traditional Medicare program, whose overhead costs are far lower. But this is not the case: In fact, taxpayers—including those not enrolled in a private plan—pick up the tab for much of private insurers’ profligacy. And the high cost of keeping private insurance alive would make it prohibitively expensive to cover the 30 million uninsured in the United States and to upgrade coverage for the tens of millions with inadequate plans.

Public option proposals come in three main varieties:

§ A simple buy-in. Some proposals, including those by Joe Biden and Pete Buttigieg, would offer a Medicare-like public plan for sale alongside private plans on the insurance exchanges now available under the Affordable Care Act. These buy-in reforms would minimize the need for new taxes, since most enrollees would be charged premiums. But tens of millions would remain uninsured or with coverage so skimpy, they still couldn’t afford care.

https://www.thenation.com/article/insurance-health-care-medicare/

If I were to vote in a presidential
primary today, I would vote for:
Joe Biden
38 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Yup. HerbChestnut Oct 2019 #1
Totally. BeckyDem Oct 2019 #2
M4A $34 trillion over 10 years. Yes your taxes will go up. wasupaloopa Oct 2019 #3
But so will the amount of care avalible for you. SterlingPound Oct 2019 #4
That fact is lost on some. BeckyDem Oct 2019 #7
YUP SterlingPound Oct 2019 #8
The fact that is lost is voters, therefore congress is never going to pass a 32 trillion $ bill! Thekaspervote Oct 2019 #24
You mean quality? Not necessarily for those with good plans ---some are affordable or paid for by emmaverybo Oct 2019 #22
That's fine. It will likely be cheaper than paying for private insurance. HerbChestnut Oct 2019 #13
Indeed. And I'm willing to pay a lot more taxes in order to get rid of the giant PatrickforO Oct 2019 #34
The DU rules specify a 4 paragraph limit, to avoid violating copyright limit. pnwmom Oct 2019 #5
+1 crazytown Oct 2019 #9
"The Nation" is a RW source nt NYMinute Oct 2019 #10
lol BeckyDem Oct 2019 #11
that is simply a false assertion, regardless of whether you agree with the OP or not Celerity Oct 2019 #15
It certainly has some pretty far out there ideas. Stopped reading anything they print Thekaspervote Oct 2019 #25
That's flat out false...it endosed Sen. Sanders in '16 AncientGeezer Oct 2019 #27
No it's not. What kind of talk is that? PatrickforO Oct 2019 #29
+10000 Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Oct 2019 #20
Ah, that explains it. The Nation attacked Hillary. PatrickforO Oct 2019 #30
And The Nation has promoted Edward Snowden. n/t pnwmom Oct 2019 #33
From 2017 BeckyDem Oct 2019 #6
Oh please! Of course repubs favor repeal.. and replace with nothing Thekaspervote Oct 2019 #26
I think you're missing the point here ... compare and contrast the OP with this 2017 article mr_lebowski Oct 2019 #35
Please self-delete .. The Nation is a RW source nt BlueMississippi Oct 2019 #12
No, it is no such thing. The authors are also not right wing, not in any shape or form. BeckyDem Oct 2019 #14
DU was sued for copyright infringement and one reason it won the suit pnwmom Oct 2019 #19
You've got to be kidding. crazytown Oct 2019 #16
+10000 Celerity Oct 2019 #18
Thank you. BeckyDem Oct 2019 #21
yw Celerity Oct 2019 #23
lol, the same bollocks as the other poster making the exact same erroneous claim Celerity Oct 2019 #17
Who told you that? blm Oct 2019 #31
Horse pucky as we geezers say. AncientGeezer Oct 2019 #32
Wrong kcr Oct 2019 #37
Interesting logic, and compelling. PatrickforO Oct 2019 #28
Essential reading for all, but especially those who oppose M4A Fiendish Thingy Oct 2019 #36
Or will die PDittie Oct 2019 #38
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