By David Hogberg on 1.18.07 @ 12:06AM
Paul Krugman this year will pull out all stops to impose universal health care.
I had hoped that Paul Krugman would make giving up his jeremiads
on universal health care one of his New Year's Resolutions. No such
luck. Indeed, time had barely run out on 2006 when the New York
Times ran one of his most embarrassingly ill-informed efforts to date. So let's get 2007
off on a better note with an adequate fisking, shall we?
Krugman writes, "The U.S. health care system is a scandal and a
disgrace." Although Krugman is overstating his case, I would agree
that our health care system has some serious problems. While I
would
argue that the reason is government mismanagement, I'm guessing
Krugman thinks government is the solution. In the next
sentence Krugman writes, "But maybe, just maybe, 2007 will be the
year we start the move toward universal coverage." Surprise.
Anyway, Krugman continues:
In 2005, almost 47 million Americans -- including more
than 8 million children -- were uninsured, and many more had
inadequate insurance.
Apologists for our system try to minimize the significance of
these numbers. Many of the uninsured, asserted the 2004 Economic
Report of the President, ''remain uninsured as a matter of
choice.''
And then you wake up. A scathing article in yesterday's Los
Angeles Times described how insurers refuse to cover anyone
with even the slightest hint of a pre-existing condition. People
have been denied insurance for reasons that range from childhood
asthma to a ''past bout of jock itch.''
What a distortion! First, note how Krugman infers that lack of
insurance is due largely to denial of coverage by private insurance
companies. But does Krugman have any evidence of that other than
the anecdotal presented in the
L.A. Times article? Well,
no, because lack of insurance is due to many factors and
surveys that have looked at the matter have
found about five percent of the uninsured are denied coverage due
to poor health.
Furthermore, the Economic Report of the President (pdf) does not minimize
the problem of the uninsured by dismissing it as a "matter of
choice." Indeed, the report notes that there are many reasons why
people are uninsured, including those who are temporarily uninsured
(four months or less) or have access to public programs like
Medicaid but have not signed up (see page 197). Of course, treating
the President's report fairly would undermine Krugman's argument
for government-run health care.
Next,
Some say that we can't afford universal health care,
even though every year lack of insurance plunges millions of
Americans into severe financial distress and sends thousands to an
early grave. But every other advanced country somehow manages to
provide all its citizens with essential care. [Italics
mine.]
They do? Krugman could try telling that to the
50
Canadians who once lived in southern Ontario and were on a
waiting list to receive a cardiac catheterization, but they are now
dead. Maybe he could tell it to the 59 other Canadians on that
waiting list who suffered a serious heart attack. Or perhaps he
could tell that to the families of the nearly 15,000
victims of a French heat wave in August 2003 who died in
part due to an overburdened and unprepared health care system. Or
perhaps it just depends on Krugman's definition of "essential
care."
Next up is Krugman's attempt to paint our health care system as
inferior,
The only reason universal coverage seems hard to
achieve here is the spectacular inefficiency of the U.S. health
care system. Americans spend more on health care per person than
anyone else -- almost twice as much as the French, whose medical
care is among the best in the world. Yet we have the highest infant
mortality and close to the lowest life expectancy of any wealthy
nation.
I'm not going to get into the defects of using life expectancy and
infant mortality as measurements of a health care system (go
here for that). The question here is whether
Krugman
knows that these are poor measures. Since 2002 he
has written a least 8 columns in the
New York Times plus
an article in both the
New York Times Magazine and the
New York Review of Books using these measures to
bash our health care system. It is difficult to believe that, in
all that time, he has never received an email telling him that such
measures tell us little about a health care system. Indeed, going
back to one of his
columns from 2005, it's pretty clear that he has received
such an email:
Most Americans probably don't know that we have
substantially lower life-expectancy and higher infant-mortality
figures than other advanced countries. It would be wrong to jump to
the conclusion that this poor performance is entirely the result of
a defective health care system; social factors, notably America's
high poverty rate, surely play a role. Still, it seems puzzling
that we spend so much, with so little return.
Krugman is clearly weasel-wording his way to an admission that life
expectancy and infant mortality are poor measures of a health care
system. So, Krugman knows that these measures are lousy, but he
continues to use them. I can't imagine why.
Finally, Krugman promises that government-run health care will
be cheaper than the present system:
If it were up to me, we'd have a Medicare-like system
for everyone, paid for by a dedicated tax that for most people
would be less than they or their employers currently pay in
insurance premiums.
How does Krugman know that the tax would be less than what
employers currently pay in premiums? In his recent "Medicare For
All"
proposal, Senator Ted Kennedy claimed that funding
for his plan would come in part from a seven percent payroll tax on
business. Kennedy claimed that businesses spend 13 percent of
payroll on health insurance, but government data contradicts that
claim. According to the
Bureau
of Labor Statistics, average total hourly compensation was
$27.31 in 2006, and health insurance accounted for about 7.6
percent ($2.09) of that. While that 7.6 percent appears larger than
Kennedy's seven percent payroll tax, remember that is just a tax on
business. Kennedy also taxes employees another 1.7 percent to fund
his health care plan. And that only covers 85 percent off the cost
of the plan -- the remaining 15 percent comes from "general
revenues." If Krugman wants a "dedicated tax," then it would cost
about 9.1* percent of payroll under the Kennedy plan -- a fair
amount more than what employers are currently paying. Perhaps he
has a plan other than Kennedy's in mind, but Krugman's lack of
specifics in that passage in cause for considerable skepticism.
Indeed, a huge amount of skepticism is in order because, in the
very next sentence, Krugman claims his Medicare-like system "would,
at a stroke, cover the uninsured, greatly reduce administrative
costs and make it much easier to work on preventive care. Such a
system would leave people with the right to choose their own
doctors, and with other choices as well." Always be wary of lefties
promising massive government benefits that will cost less.
(*percentage corrected, 1/22/07--Ed.)
David Hogberg is a senior analyst at the National Center for
Public Policy Research. He also hosts his own website, Hog
Haven.
topics:
Taxes, Health Care, Business, Medicaid, Books, NATO, Medicare