Wednesday, November 25, 2009

"I'd gladly Pay You Tuesday For ObamaCare Today....."


How to Hide the Incline

John on November 25, 2009
From one form of statistical malfeasance to another. This chart shows the cost of the Democrats health reform proposal (Senate flavor):
Slide 1
Looking at the green vs. blue brackets you’ll see how the Democrats crafted the bill such that they can claim it is only going to cost $900 billion within the standard 10-year budget window. This is only because it doesn’t begin operating until 2014 and then scales up gradually! In fact, the cost over the first decade of operation is fully double that number. [HT:Michael Barone]
I’d also like to call attention again to something Morgen discovered a week ago. The bulk of the “deficit reduction” in the Senate bill comes from one program. It’s an assisted living program for the elderly. However, this program will begin paying out much more money in the second 10 years and will not be contributing to any kind of surplus. In short, it’s another gimmick to hide the incline in costs.
Category: Health & EducationPolitics |

After a Takeover of Health Care, Can a One-Child Policy Be Far Behind?

After a Takeover of Health Care, Can a One-Child Policy Be Far Behind?

Friday, November 20, 2009

The Senate Version is Even Worse Than the House


The Heritage Foundation
The Morning Bell
 

FRIDAY, NOV 20, 2009
Last Saturday night Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) forced through a vote on her 2,032 page health care bill only a few days after releasing it to the public. Now Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) is poised for another Saturday night cram down, forcing a Senate cloture vote mere days before his 2,074 page bill was given to Senators. Yet again, Congress will be forced to vote on a bill that none of them have actually read. More importantly, as we pour through the details, it becomes obvious that none of them even believe the plan will do what the bill says.



Kills Jobs: All told, the Reid Bill raises taxes by $370.2 billion over the next ten years with many of those taxes starting to be collected this year while unemployment is at 10.2% and rising. Worse, the bill includes a job killing employer mandate which taxes companies for hiring people. Specifically, companies with more than 50 employees that do not offer a health plan approved by federal bureaucrats will be forced to pay a $750 per employee job tax.

Hurts Small Businesses: The Reid Bill acknowledges it is terrible public policy for small businesses and tries to address this problem by including a “small business tax credit” to minimize the impact of the job killing employer mandates and regulation-caused rises in private health insurance premiums. But the tax credit only lasts two years and largely excludes small business owners, small businesses with high-average payrolls, and firms with 25 or more workers. After all exclusions, essentially the only eligible firms are those firms with 10 or fewer workers as well as those with low-income workers—the least likely to offer coverage even with a significant price reduction.

Hurts Families: The Reid Bill includes an individual mandate that forces any American who does not have a federal bureaucrat approved health plan to pay an annual tax penalty of $750 per adult family member and $375 per child, with a maximum penalty of $2,250 per family. These penalties are indexed for inflation, which means they are likely to increase nearly every year. These taxes are fixed amounts based on family size, not income. A family of at least two adults and two children is actually worse off under the Senate bill if they make less than $99,350 a year. The only nod to affordability is a “hardship exemption” if the lowest available premium for a bare-bones plan is more than 8 percent of your income. But that saves you money only if your income is less than $28,125 a year.

Hurts Poor: The Reid Bill’s employer mandate is especially punitive on poor families. Firms that hire an employee from a low-income family who qualify for an insurance subsidy are charged a tax penalty of $3,000. So a company could save $3,000 by hiring, say, someone with a working spouse or a teenager with working parents, rather than a single mother with three children. Worse, companies only have to pay $750 an employee instead of $3,000 if one quarter of employees are low-income. This creates a situation where, if a company has a lot of low-income workers, they can actually save money by dropping their health plan and just dumping all their employees into the federal exchange at their own expense.

Hurts States: The Reid bill expands Medicaid eligibility for people below 133 percent of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL). Even with a provision aimed at Senator Landrieu’s Louisiana that picks up some state costs, the CBO estimates that state spending under the Medicaid provisions will still increase by $25 billion. The Democratic Governor of Tennessee Phil Bredesen told a state budget meeting this Wednesday: “I wish every member of Congress would have to come sit in this room and listen to the real world of what’s going on in Medicaid today. I mean how can you listen to this stuff and the stuff you are talking about eliminating just to get through this and then talk about adding a whole bunch of new expenses onto the states.”

Funds Abortion: Unlike the House-passed Stupak-Pitts amendment which treats abortion funding the same way the Federal Employee Health Benefits Plan does (the same health insurance all members of Congress have), the Reid Bill fosters taxpayer funding of elective abortion by authorizing the HHS Secretary to create a funding scheme that will permit inclusion of abortion coverage in the bill’s public option and mandates the inclusion of at least one plan with elective abortion coverage in each state’s health insurance exchange.

Hides True Costs: According to the Congressional Budget Office, the Reid Bill as written would spend less than $900 billion over the next ten years. But the CBO is only allowed to score what Congress says it will do, not what everybody knows it actually will do. So the CBO warns: “These longer-term calculations assume that the provisions are enacted and remain unchanged throughout the next two decades which is often not the case for major legislation … The long-term budgetary impact could be quite different if key provisions of the bill were ultimately changed or not fully implemented.” The Senate bill depends on using cuts to Medicare to pay for its $1.2 Trillion coverage expansion. These dramatic savings, of course, assume that these spending cuts stay intact. Nobody believes they will. And the Massachusetts experience proves just that. Harvard Medical School Dean Dr. Jeffrey Flier explains:


There are important lessons to be learned from recent experience with reform in Massachusetts. Here, insurance mandates similar to those proposed in the federal legislation succeeded in expanding coverage but—despite initial predictions—increased total spending.

Selling an uncertain and potentially unwelcome outcome such as this to the public would be a challenging task. It is easier to assert, confidently but disingenuously, that decreased costs and enhanced quality would result from the current legislation.

That is exactly what the Reid health care bill is: a completely disingenuous plan to increase coverage while reducing cost. Nobody believes Congress can or will follow through with spending cuts required to keep this scheme from bankrupting our country. That is why the AMA can support Obamacare despite the fact that both the House and Senate bills call for at least a 21% cut in doctor pay starting in 2011. Nobody believes those cuts are going to happen. Nobody believes in this bill.

Friday, November 13, 2009

How ObamaScare Will Affect One Citizen - Not as Promised


Healthcare Constructivism: A View From My Window

November 12, 2009
by Mario Rizzo
I have taken a quick look at some of the provisions of the recently-passed House healthcare bill. What I want to do here is determine how it will affect me and others in a similar situation. I do not think my own situation is exceptional. I urge others to determine how it will affect them.  
My situation: My health insurance is provided by New York University. They offer a number of plans each with distinctive features, coverage and monthly premiums. I have chosen a point-of-service plan with very good in-network coverage. (I don’t like HMOs because of all the permissions I have to obtain before seeing specialists as well as other rigidities and limitations.) It also has an out-of-network aspect that enables me to see doctors outside of the United Healthcare network. I like this feature because if I ever want a specific good doctor I can still have coverage regardless of the network he or she is in.
This feature of the plan does not offer very good coverage, however. For out-of-network doctors and facilities, in 2010, it will cover only 60% of customary and reasonable charges (usually less than many specialists charge in NYC) — with a yearly deductible of $2,500. 
Now this is where the House bill comes in. In order to collect more taxes from “the rich” it will limit the amount I can put in a flexible spending healthcare account (my own pre-tax dollars) to $2,500. “Why should I have all of these untaxed dollars to spend on my healthcare?” they are thinking. Are they also thinking that I am rich?  Many middle-class people have flexible spending accounts. 
The effect of the limitation is this. Going outside of my network will become much more expensive. My choice of doctors, labs and hospitals will be more limited than before.
Previously, I was spending my own money and had some incentive to spend it prudently. (I would have greater incentive if the money did not disappear at the end of the year.) I could also use it for medical expenses not covered by insurance. (Dental insurance is normally not that good.) 
I would now be basically stuck with in-network providers.
Does the House bill mandate better out-of-network coverage? I do not know the answer. (The full definition of what constitutes a “qualified plan” will not be determined until after the bill is passed!) But there are only two possibilities. First, it does not. In that case my healthcare coverage is worse than before – my choices are effectively more limited. 
Second, it does mandate better coverage out-of-network. If my employer must continue to provide this option it will be more expensive and my premiums will rise. Of course, my employer could have given me a better plan at greater cost before. It didn’t need the House of Representatives to do that.
My employer might not continue this out-of-network coverage, however, since it must pay at least 72.5% of the higher premiums. It may not be willing to do that. Then my choices become completely limited to in-network providers.  
Thus the effect of this one provision alone is either to limit my choice of doctors or raise the cost of my insurance.
There are many, many other provisions. I can understand neither most of the bill’s language nor how it will affect my situation in respects other than the above.  Look at the thing!!!  
In my own case, looking through the bill has made me feel small and powerless. Can we avoid becoming incompetent dependents looking to the State for our well-being? Oh I forgot: We have already become that. But I do hope we can avoid even more of the same.


Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Old Time Recession

The Road to Serfdom?

Answer the question: Which way is our nation heading, tiny steps at a time? Are we headed toward more liberty, or are we headed toward greater government control over our lives? 

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Let The Senate Know How Destructive The ObamaCare Bill Is And How Easily The Current System can Be Made Better


Conservatives need to hammer home four points to shift independent voters and moderate Democrats even more decisively against enactment of Obamacare.

One, Obamacare will impose substantial new costs on the already insured middle class. The bill approved by the House establishes one-size-fits-all insurance rules which will drive up premiums and raise taxes on the health-care sector which will be passed onto middle-class health-care consumers.

Two, Obamacare will destroy jobs. The House bill would impose an 8 percent payroll tax on all but the smallest employers who do not offer health insurance and a 5.4 percent income tax surcharge on higher income individuals who also own small businesses. These taxes will discourage hiring and force layoffs when the number one concern of most American voters is job creation.

Three, Obamacare will ration care. The House bill relies almost exclusively on arbitrary, across-the-board payment rate reductions for health-care providers to achieve savings. If passed, that would just be the beginning of it. Despite all of the talk of painless efficiency measures, the Democratic sponsors really have no plan to control costs except with price-setting. Always and everywhere, price controls drive out willing suppliers of services, leading to queues and waiting lists.

Fourth, Obamacare is entirely unnecessary. We can fix the problems in U.S. health care without a government takeover by pursuing sensible, targeted reforms:

1) With properly structured high-risk pools and insurance regulation, pre-existing conditions could be insured at reasonable costs.
2) With tax credits and small-business reforms (such as those implemented in Utah), most of the uninsured would have access to coverage. Letting individuals deduct healthcare premium expenses as tax credits will enable more individuals to directly purchase insurance, making it portable from job to job. This will also drive down costs by making the payer the same as the recipient of the service - thereby making them more cost-conscious consumers of health services.
3) Letting insurance firms compete across state lines will increase competition and lower costs as firms compete to be more efficient.
4) Eliminate State insurance mandates. Mandates require people (or their employers) to purchase coverage they may not want (fertility treatment, hair implants, etc) which raises teh cost of insurance. Studies have shown that states with more mandates than other states have 15%-20% higher insurance premiums.

Obama Care - As Efficient as Any Government Program. Scared Yet?


This recent article by James C. Capretta in The New Atlantic correctly shows that ObamaCare is all about politics and fooling the public with "promises" of savings and efficiency that never have and never will be achieved by Government Programs.
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Obamacare is predicated on the assumption that the federal government has the knowledge, capacity, and will to drive greater efficiency in American health care. Inadvertently, White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel has become an articulate spokesman for why that assumption is dead wrong.
For months, the president and his team argued that stepped-up investments in health information technology, comparative effectiveness research, and prevention and wellness programs could “bend the cost-curve,” thus making an expansion of coverage affordable for taxpayers. But the Congressional Budget Office, along with a chorus of independent skeptics, said those steps would never be up to the task of reliable cost control without more fundamental changes in the financial incentives facing consumers and providers of services.
Unfazed, the administration argued that it had other ways to control costs waiting in the wings. The conversation turned to “delivery system reform,” with the administration and its allies in Congress suggesting that new ways of paying health-care providers in Medicare could spur a wholesale shift in how doctors and hospitals cared for patients. As White House Budget Director Peter Orszag put it, “Medicare and Medicaid are big enough to change the way medicine is practiced.” The implication was that the new team was working on ways to painlessly root out wasteful spending by compensating providers for their services differently than they are paid today.
But no such proposals were ever forthcoming (except for relatively minor adjustments related to payments for hospitals with high readmission rates, and some baby steps toward more “bundling” of payments for a full episode of care). What the White House did eventually propose was a commission that would have the authority to change the way Medicare pays for services without further approval by Congress. So instead of offering a serious plan to “bend the cost-curve,” the administration offered a commission that would come up with a serious plan to “bend the cost-curve.” Quite predictably, many in Congress have not been so keen on this idea, as it would hand off to an unelected commission the power to rewrite Medicare’s provider-payment regulations. The administration’s commission idea is not in the House-passed bill.
Not to worry! The administration has another favorite cost-cutting tool. The idea is to tax so-called “Cadillac” health insurance plans, thus forcing both the insurers and the plan enrollees to find ways to economize to avoid the tax. But there’s a little problem with this idea too. President Obama was against it before he was for it. Recall that Republican presidential candidate John McCain proposed to convert today’s preferential tax treatment of employer-paid insurance premiums into a refundable credit. In October 2008, the Obama-Biden campaign excoriated this idea in scores of ads because it would tax health benefits “for the first time ever.” Now, the president wants to do just that — but, again not surprisingly, the populist revolt he stoked against it in 2008 was still smoldering when he endorsed it in 2009. It turns out that taxing high-cost insurance plans will actually hit many middle-class households, especially those with union members enrolled in collectively-bargained plans. House Democrats wouldn’t go near the idea, and reports indicate that the version of the high-cost insurance tax in the Senate Finance Committee bill is getting watered down by the day. If some version of it survives at all, it is highly unlikely to pinch enough to generate meaningful cost control.
Reviewing this legislative landscape, it’s suddenly dawning on all concerned that the bills moving in Congress won’t come close to “bending the curve” after all. That’s the thrust of a piece today in theNew York Times, as well as one from last week in the Washington Post. Of course, even as House members and Senators shy away from tough decisions, they are not nearly as reticent about extending new health entitlement commitments. Thus, it is now abundantly clear that if anything is produced by this legislative process, it will be a bill that piles more unaffordable entitlement commitments on top of the unreformed ones already on the books.
And so what’s the White House response to this alarming state of fiscal affairs? As recounted in theTimes piece, Emanuel blames the limits of politics. “Let’s be honest,” Emanuel apparently stated in a recent interview. “The goal isn’t to see whether I can pass this through the executive board of the Brookings Institution. I’m passing it through the United State Congress with people who represent constituents.”
That’s exactly right of course. But it’s also an indictment of the entire Obamacare enterprise. The health-care bills under consideration would hand over to the federal government nearly all power for organizing American health care. And yet there is not a shred of evidence that Congress or the administration can handle these tasks well. Indeed, there is abundant evidence that, in a crunch to control costs, politicians will do what they always do, which is impose across-the-board payment-rate cuts. That’s certainly how the House-passed bill reduces Medicare spending. There’s no delivery system reform. It’s not “pay for performance.” There’s no calibrating of reimbursement levels based on the quality of care provided. It’s cuts for all providers, no matter how well or badly they treat patients.
Ultimately, the question in health reform is this: what process has the best chance to bring about continual improvement in the efficiency and quality of patient care? The only way to provide better care at less cost is with higher productivity in the health sector. What can make that happen, year in and year out?
Rahm Emanuel has given us the answer. The federal government, subject as it is to the constraints of politics, can’t do it. The only way to slow the pace of rising costs without sacrificing quality is by building a functioning marketplace, with cost-conscious consumers driving the allocation of resources. The government must play an important oversight role in such a marketplace. But if we rely on politicians, or even commissions that answer to them, for cost control, what we will get is lower quality, not more efficiency.

Don't Fool Them (The US Public) Twice.....

Even if this country can survive intact and unharmed after the Obama administration-- or, heaven help us, two terms of Obama-- the gullibility that led to his being elected in the first place will still be there for some other slick demagogue to come along and get the power to put the American way of life, and even our physical safety, at risk again.

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Centrally-Planned Care Rationing

This weekend, House Democrats are planning to pass two health-care bills. One is a sweeping plan that would shift nearly all power over the organization of American health care to Washington, D.C. The other — a full repeal of the “sustainable growth rate” (SGR) formula governing Medicare physician fee payments — is proof positive that the first bill’s strategy of centralized planning is ill-conceived and dangerous to the quality of U.S. medical care.

To understand why, it is worth reviewing how the SGR came to be. In the late 1980s and 1990s, the Medicare bureaucracy set out to reform the way physicians are reimbursed for providing services to the program’s enrollees. The idea was to shift more resources toward generalists, who were then thought to be undercompensated for spending time with patients, and to control overall costs by limiting the growth of aggregate payments to growth in the size of the U.S. economy. After several years of study, lengthy payment regulations were issued, including a predecessor to the SGR formula, which had immediate and profound financial consequences for nearly every practicing physician in the United States.

And so what happened? The exact opposite of what was intended. Instead of encouraging more physicians to enter into primary care, the Medicare physician-fee schedule has rewarded more specialization. The fee schedule only controls prices, not volume. As Medicare’s administrators have tried to hold down costs with fee cuts, specialists increased their share of the pie with more tests and procedures, at the expense of primary-care reimbursement rates. Not surprisingly, the trend of physicians entering specialist practices has accelerated dramatically in the last twenty years. Moreover, overall costs have never been brought under control. With volume soaring, the SGR formula governing annual fee updates has gone completely off the rails. In 2010, fees are supposed to get cut by 21 percent unless Congress overrides it yet again. To secure the AMA’s endorsement of their health-care bill, House leaders are planning to scrap the SGR component of the physician fee system altogether, at a cost of more than $200 billion over a decade.

The irony of the situation seems to be lost on House Democrats: Congress is moving to repeal a prime example of health-care central planning run amok while simultaneously extending federal control to every corner of American health care.

For its part, the Obama administration has been promising for months that it would deliver new and improved central planning to “bend the cost-curve.” The White House Budget Director, Peter Orszag, in a February interview with Politico, suggested that the incoming Obama team was working on groundbreaking ideas that would use the levers of government payment policy to painlessly eliminate inefficiency in American health care. As Orszag put it, “Medicare and Medicaid are big enough to change the way medicine is practiced.”

Now, nine months later, it turns out the Obama administration doesn’t actually have any new ideas of what to do. It is instead proposing to empower an unelected, unaccountable commission to come up with the whiz-bang ideas, which would go into effect automatically without further congressional action. But House Democrats found the commission approach unacceptable, as it would take too much of the central planning power away from them. And so they have instead filled their bill with assorted pilot projects and tests of new Medicare payment approaches. Orszag touts these as good ideas with potential, too. But these ideas would have virtually no impact on federal spending, according to the Congressional Budget Office, and they certainly are not up to the task of offsetting the costs of the massive increase in entitlement spending contemplated in the House leadership bill.

Instead of clever new ideas that painlessly root out waste and inefficiency, the House bill finds savings the same way all central planners ultimately do: with deep and arbitrary across-the-board payment rate cuts. Despite all of the talk of delivery system reform, there’s no real effort to make distinctions based on the quality of patient care. Everyone gets cut the same.

And that’s the real danger of the House bill. There’s no prospect that the federal government will become more nimble overnight at managing the vast and complex health sector in the United States. To control costs in health care, the federal government will do what it always does — it will set prices. In time, that will have the predictable result of driving out willing suppliers of services, leading to queues and access problems. Call it centrally-planned rationing of care.