In addition, the proposals being considered and that have engendered the fighting, all fail in terms of what might be deemed the most important aspect of reform- getting escalating costs under control. While universal coverage is an important goal, runaway spending on health care is a major threat to the American economy with a potentially disastrous impact if it is not quickly addressed. Whether there is a public option for health insurance or an “insurance cooperative” to provide coverage, does not matter if serious cost constraints are not included as part of any legislation.
The Republicans have not offered any realistic ideas to date to control escalating costs. Thus far, the Democrats have offered pie in the sky, saying that electronic health records and preventive care will produce significant savings. (Though they may improve care, potential savings are far in the future.) Use of a Medicare Advisory Board to cull major savings from Medicare and Medicaid (MedPAC) is also not an answer, as it would likely have to cut flesh rather than fat from these programs in order to deliver the sums that are needed. Taxing the wealthy to find enough money to fund reform is not a course many politicians are eager to embrace.
There is however, a fiscally responsible way to shape health care reform; a path that would not require any new government spending or increase in taxes, and that would not add to the budget deficit or national debt. Though this may sound impossible, an appropriate program could be implemented if Congress were willing to take on the health care system’s stakeholders, particularly the insurance industry, organized medicine and the trial lawyers. This would likely entail bloody, hand-to-hand combat, or worse, which is why politicians have been reluctant to go this route.
Administrative costs are estimated to consume 15% to 25% of health care spending- $500 billion at 20%. The Congressional Budget Office projected unnecessary medical care at about 30% of health care expenditures, or up to $830 billion. Even if these figures are off by 10% or 15%, there is a huge amount of money within the health care system that can be harvested to fund universal coverage and a reform program. It will take strong grass roots pressure and political courage from