Why the Obamacare Gold Rush
Is Bankrupting America, Submitted by Tyler Durden, 5/2/16, Submitted by Devon Herrick via
National Center for Policy Analysis,
Our health
care system is going to implode under its own weight. National Health Expenditures are approaching 20
percent of gross domestic product — a figure that is expected to about double
over the next half century.
Obamacare didn’t start the process,
but it’s expediting the job started when Kaiser Shipyards requested permission
during World War II to offer health coverage as a fringe benefit. This was
further exacerbated in 1965 by the poorly-designed entitlement programs
Medicare and Medicaid that are now draining the Treasury.
Just look at the evidence. Health care is unaffordable for most
Americans. To have any hope of affording even minor medical procedures,
Americans rely on health insurance or public coverage to pay much of the
cost. About 88 percent of medical
bills are paid for by an entity other than the patient. As a
result, health insurance has also become unaffordable. The average employer plan costs American families $17,545 per year. A
Bronze plan from the exchange for the average middle-age family costs $12,000
per year with combined annual deductibles of $8,000 to $13,000. Provider
networks are so narrow that any major procedure is surely to result in
out-of-network charges that can be astronomical.
Arguably,
the greatest problem our health care system faces is high costs that are rising
at more than double the rate of consumer inflation. The price of newer drugs are rising so high
politicians like Hillary Clinton are calling for caps on copays. Of course,
that will do nothing to lower the cost; it will merely facilitate further price
increases. A New
York Times article questioned why a new drug marketed to treat women with low
libido comes with a monthly price tag of $800 —
even though the pill hardly works better than a placebo. The reasoning behind
charging so much? Because the drug maker Valeant Pharmaceuticals assumed health
plans would have little choice but to cough up nearly $10,000 per year for
women whose doctors prescribed it. Of course, women themselves would never pay
$800 per month for a drug whose clinical trials showed it was only correlated
one additional sexual encounter per month in the women taking it. Some of the
newest cholesterol drugs cost from $1,500 to $2,000 per month. The latest drugs
for rheumatoid arthritis cost even more. New treatments for Hepatitis C cost
$60,000 to $90,000 for a course of treatment. Now do you understand why health
insurance is so expensive?
This is
not just a drug problem; believe it or not drugs are actually the best bargain
in American health care today. Rather, the
more egregious examples reflect a growing trend by health care industry
stakeholders to jack up revenue any way they can. The strategic plan in the
health care industry is to extract as much revenue as possible from third-party
payers, because most consumers are both unwilling — and unable — to pay those
exorbitant amounts unless the costs are hidden from them and they are forced to
pay for them indirectly. It’s a health care Gold Rush and employers and
insurers are the claims being mined. But it’s ultimately consumers who pay the
price, since consumers accept lower wages in return for employee health
benefits, pay higher premiums for insurance and pay higher taxes to cover the
cost of public programs.
Over the
years Americans began to balk and forgo health coverage. Some of this was because they were unwilling to pay
exorbitant prices; nearly one-third of the uninsured in 2010 had household
incomes above $50,000. Just over half of those had incomes of more than
$75,000. An additional one-third of the uninsured likely decided they didn’t
have sufficient incomes to afford health coverage and pay their living
expenses.
To combat
the growing tendency of moderate-income Americans to starve the health care beast,
Obamacare requires all legal U.S. residents to maintain health coverage.
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) also
forces firms with more than 50 workers to provide expensive coverage or pay a
fine. The natural response by employers facing costly mandates is to contract
out as many tasks as possible and avoid growing beyond 49 workers. To thwart
that strategy, Obama’s National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) has essentially
ruled a contractor is a joint employer of the workers it subcontracts. This
will badly damage the franchise model of business ownership, since small
businesses will be responsible for spending $2,000 to $3,000 apiece on many in
their workers. This isn’t for health coverage; it’s the penalty for failing to
provide health coverage. An actual employee health plan would cost much
more. Thus employers will face
these costs without the expectation that workers will willingly accept wages
because these are employer penalties, not employee benefits. An entrepreneur
near Fort Worth, Texas explained to a New York Times reporter that her Fantastic
Sams franchise locations are nearing the 49 worker limit. She would
open an additional location or two but complying with Obamacare would wipe out
her profits. She may have no choice. Under a strict interpretation of the NLRB
regulations a franchise could be forced to provide coverage because its parent
company has indirect control over thousands of employees.
Obamacare
did not reform health care system; it merely transformed it to subsidize
favored constituents. Hospitals have been encouraged
to vertically integrate by acquiring physicians’ practices. This allows
hospitals to capture doctors’ power to order expensive treatments and to charge
higher facility fees due to physicians’ hospital affiliation. Hospitals have
also been allowed to consolidate into regional health care system monopolies
and oligopolies that can demand higher prices than a marketplace populated with
competing hospitals. To pay for
all this price gouging, employers are being forced to offer benefits that many
workers themselves cannot afford or absorb in lower take home pay.
When Obamacare was passed six years
ago I predicted that we are destined to revisit the perverse law in the future.
Many of my most dire predictions are coming true in spades. The exchange system
created by the ACA compels healthy people to overpay so those who would otherwise
face higher premiums get a bargain. It’s no surprise that healthy people are
heading for the exits and just paying the Obamacare penalty. Obamacare is a bad
deal for most people by design. As
a result, exchange plans are descending into an adverse selection death spiral
where premiums skyrocket after sick people sign up in droves and healthy ones
leave due to high costs.
This
cannot go on forever. The longer we wait to reform
health care, the more painful it will be. Numerous pilot projects and
experiments have found medical providers will respond with competition if given
the appropriate incentives.
But consumers must play their part. When consumers
control more of their own health care dollars, medical providers will have no
alternative but compete for those dollars on the basis of price, quality and
other amenities.
Comments
Healthcare
is a bottomless pit. There is nothing
restraining the cost, because it is a 3rd party payer system. Healthcare needs to only exist in the private
sector, with consumers paying the entire cost for their own healthcare.
Catastrophic health insurance could have played a role, but it too would
operate under the discipline of the “market’. If we had gone that route, the
discipline of Price / Demand Curve would kicked in and as prices rose, demand
would have dropped and the market would have set the prices. This would have set the incentive to require
cost-effective healthcare.
We spent
a fortune on radiation and chemo to cure cancer and it didn’t really work that
well. Now we are looking at other
alternatives that actually look better. Most of our money was wasted.
We need
to recognize that malpractice suits and government regulations need to go. Medicine isn’t that exact and all patients
are different. The State Medical Board
should be the only authority over licenses.
I
recommend that we all take responsibility for our own healthcare and refuse
overtreatment, over-testing and over- expensive treatments. Healthcare IRAs
should replace health insurance.
Repealing
Obamacare will remove regulations and the mandates. Most of us will drop health insurance and set
up IRAs.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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