Obama’s healthcare speech: soaring rhetoric, scant imagination

Thursday, 09/10/2009 - 12:17 pm by Marshall Auerback | 5 Comments

funny-doctor-150

Roosevelt Institute Braintruster Marshall Auerback diagnoses Obama’s health care address:  Heavy on the pomp, not so much the circumstantial.

A history of failed attempts to introduce universal health insurance has left us with a system in which the government pays directly or indirectly for more than half of the nation’s health care, but the actual delivery both of insurance and of care is undertaken by a crazy quilt of private insurers, for-profit hospitals, and other players who add cost without adding value. A Canadian-style single-payer system, in which the government directly provides insurance, would almost surely be both cheaper and more effective than what we now have. And we could do even better if we learned from “integrated” systems, like the Veterans Administration, that directly provide some health care as well as medical insurance.

Yet Obama is not prepared to grasp the nettle. His speech was even weaker than the spin preceding the joint address to Congress suggested. I thought the Obama people were lowering expectations with a view toward a big positive surprise and they managed to go even lower than the bar they set. He took caricatured positions on single payer in order to create a false “centrist” option. The President has basically has reduced the public option to a marginal welfare style program for 5% of the population, rather than seeing it as a way to break the monopoly of the private health insurance companies, thereby helping to reduce costs. He’s basically forcing everybody into a private health insurance run program

The bad news is that Washington currently seems incapable of accepting what the evidence on health care says. The Obama Administration remains under the influence of the health insurance and pharmaceutical industry lobbyists, and is captive to a free-market ideology that is wholly inappropriate to health care issues. As a result, it seems determined to pursue policies that will increase the fragmentation of our system and swell the ranks of the uninsured.

We need affordable health care, not health insurance. Just look what is happening in MA. It’s not solving the problem at all, because there was no mechanism introduced to REDUCE HEALTH INSURANCE COSTS. Physicians for a National Health Program’s (PNHP) study of the Massachusetts model found that the state’s 2006 reforms, instead of reducing costs, have been more expensive than expected. The budget overruns have forced the state to siphon about $150 million from safety-net providers such as public hospitals and community clinics:

“We are facing a health-care crisis in this country because private insurers are driving up costs with unnecessary overhead, bloated executive salaries and an unquenchable quest for profits - all at the expense of American consumers,” said Dr. Sidney Wolfe, director of Public Citizen’s Health Research Group. “Massachusetts’ failed attempt at reform is little more than a repeat of experiments that haven’t worked in other states. To repeat that model on a national scale would be nothing short of Einstein’s definition of insanity.”

Yet Massachusetts seems to be the implicit model. Despite the obvious popularity of Medicare, there was no serious discussion of expanding it as a possible public health care option (as we had suggested earlier) and there was no attempt to use the public option as a means of expanding choice and competition if a worker was unhappy with the health care program offered by his employer.

The Clinton health care version at least tried to deal with the issue of portability, so that health care did not get tied in directly to employment (a highly germane consideration in a time of double digit unemployment and mounting economic insecurity). There is no hint of that in the Obama plan. If anything, it represented a retrograde step from what was on offer in last year’s campaign via the Clinton or Edwards health care proposals. Most advanced countries have dealt with the defects of private health insurance in a straightforward way, by making health insurance a government service. Through Medicare, the United States has in effect done the same thing for its seniors. We get the status quo. The paucity of imagination of the proposals themselves were completely at variance with the President’s soaring rhetoric, something which is unfortunately becoming a recurrent theme of the entire Obama Presidency.

Roosevelt Institute Braintruster Marshall Auerback is a market analyst and commentator.

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5 Comments

  • Why Obama is not inclined to go for a single-payer solution ?

    Maybe we should look at his team of advisers and make the hypothesis that they are the servant of the British Empire.

    Roosevelt also knew about the British Empire, that’s why he did what he did (Pecora Commission, Glass-Steagall…). He was very aware of the little game Churchill was playing (cf. “As he saw it”, by Eliott Roosevelt).

    I’m rather surprised that you don’t make a reference to this financial Empire that took the disguise of a monetary system in order to loot the Nation-states.

    If only Roosevelt had the time to make up a Third National Bank we wouldn’t be in such a situation.

    But why don’t you support the only statesman that proposes exactly that ? Do you know Lyndon LaRouche ?

    Posted by Benoit | September 10th, 2009 at 2:40 pm

  • Does anybody remember the fact that Hillary had a better healthcare plan than Obama? I’m surprised that no one is talking about it….

    Posted by Nellie | September 11th, 2009 at 9:30 am

  • Very depressing. This plan is going to be a considerable burden on near-median income earners in NY and CA and several other states where the poverty level is a cruel and pointless abstraction several tens of thousands of dollars below where it should be set. It’s a huge give away to an industry perhaps even more venal than the financial sector. It’s very sad how little difference there is in substance, if not in tone, between the Obama and Bush 2 administrations.

    As for the British empire and their alleged domination of this nation… this nation was founded in part by wealthy landowners who didn’t wish to pay taxes to a British state that had protected them, yet wished to recreate the British feudal system of sorts here. While London and New York may be in bed together, in terms of global financial arrangements, it has to be admitted that they are so willingly, and that America is hardly suffering under British dominion, but rather, merely an excellent student of that discarded empire, a student which has surpassed its master on many levels.

    Posted by James Call | September 11th, 2009 at 12:33 pm

  • Marshall:

    I do not expect a return; but, would you expect a doctor to really understand returns, etc?

    “study of the Massachusetts model found that the state’s 2006 reforms”

    Here is qhat the Boston Globe http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/editorials/articles/2009/08/05/mass_bashers_take_note_health_reform_is_working/, August 5, 2009 , and an Independent Taxpayers Association http://www.masstaxpayers.org/files/Health%20law%20costs%20aren.pdf, July 29, 2009 had to say about MA healthcare Law:

    “Its report this spring put the cost to the state taxpayer at about $88 million a year, less than four-tenths of 1 percent of the state budget of $27 billion. Yes, the state recently had to cut benefits for legal immigrants, and safety-net hospital Boston Medical Center has sued for higher state aid. But that is because the recession has cut state revenues, not because universal healthcare is a boondoggle.” Boston Globe”

    and here:

    Widner: “Between fiscal 2006 and 2010, the annual incremental cost from the state budget is less than $100 million, a modest sum for this historic achievement. This cost is very much in line with estimates that were made when the bill was passed.

    From a base of $1.04 billion in fiscal 2006, the state is projected to spend $1.75 billion on healthcare reform in fiscal 2010, an increase of about $700 million, half of which is supported by federal reimbursements. The $350 million state share translates into an average yearly increase of only $88 million.”

    and the Massachusetts Independent Taxpayers:

    “Massachusetts broke new ground with its approach to health care reform, and thus far the underlying financial model of shared participation is working well, with major strides in reducing the size of the uninsured population and only a marginal impact on state spending.”

    I am not sure your sources can be believed when an independent taxpayers association can come out in favor of MA healthcare program.

    Posted by run75441 | September 12th, 2009 at 5:00 pm

  • Benoit,

    “Why Obama is not inclined to go for a single-payer solution ?”

    Would the manager of a GM dealership suggest a Toyota to a prospective buyer?

    Posted by Andrei Vyshinsky | September 13th, 2009 at 1:18 pm

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