Talk About Your Waste, Fraud and Abuse

October 27th, 2009

Thirty Percent of Health Insurance Premiums Used to Lobby Against Reform?

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Establishing a national single-payer style health-care reform system would provide a major stimulus for the U.S. economy by creating 2.6 million new jobs, and infusing $317 billion in new business and public revenues, with another $100 billion in wages into the U.S. economy, according to the findings of a groundbreaking study released recently by the California Nurses Association.

The number of jobs created by a single-payer system, expanding and upgrading Medicare to cover everyone, parallels almost exactly the total job loss in 2008.

“These dramatic new findings document for the first time that a single-payer system could not only solve our healthcare crisis, but also substantially contribute to putting America back to work and assisting the economic recovery,” said Geri Jenkins, RN, co-president of the National Nurses Organizing Committee/California Nurses Association, which sponsored the study.

“Through direct and supplemental expenditures, healthcare is already a uniquely dominant force in the U.S. economy,” said Don DeMoro, lead author of the study and director of the Institute for Health and Socio-Economic Policy.

“However, so much more is possible. If we were to expand our present Medicare system to cover all Americans, the economic stimulus alone would create an immense engine that would help drive our national economy for decades to come,” DeMoro said.

Expanding Medicare to include the uninsured, and these on Medicaid or employer-sponsored health plans, and expanding coverage for those with limited Medicare, would have the following immediate impacts:

* Create 2,613,495 million new permanent good-paying jobs (slightly exceeding the number of jobs lost in 2008);

* Boost the economy with $317 billion in increased business and public revenues;

* Add $100 billion in employee compensation;

* Infuse public budgets with $44 billion in new tax revenues.

Further, moving to the new system comes with an unexpectedly low price tag, she said, given the economic benefits and the far-reaching consequences of genuine healthcare reform.


Healthcare for all far less than the Wall Street bailouts

Adding all Americans to an expanded Medicare could be achieved for $63 billion beyond the current $2.1 trillion in direct health-care spending. The $63 billion is six times less than the federal bailout for CitiGroup, and less than half the federal bailout for AIG. Solely expanding Medicare to cover the 47 million uninsured Americans (as of 2006 data on which the study is based) could be accomplished for $44 billion.

The IHSP projections build from an econometric model of the current face of health-care –- applying economic analysis to a wide array of publicly available data from Medicare, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Bureau of Economic Analysis and other sources.

It is the first known study to provide an econometric analysis of the economic benefits of health-care to the overall economy, showing how changes in direct health-care delivery affect all other significant sectors touched by health-care, and how sweeping health-care reform can help drive the nation’s economic recovery.

Health-care presently accounts for $2.105 trillion in direct expenditures. But health-care spreads far beyond doctor’s offices and hospitals. Adding in health-care business purchases of services or supplies and spending by workers, the total impact of health-care in the economy mushrooms to nearly $6 trillion.

Overall, every direct health-care dollar creates nearly three additional dollars in the U.S. economy.

As it is now, health-care generates 45 million jobs, directly and in other industries; accounts for 10.5 percent of all U.S. jobs and 12.1 percent of all U.S. wages; totals 9.2 percent of the nation’s Gross National Product; contributes about 25 percent of all federal tax revenues. Federal, state, and local taxes from the health-care sector in 2006 added up to $824 billion.

All those numbers would rise dramatically through comprehensive health-care reform. But a single-payer system would produce the biggest increase in jobs and wages. The reason, DeMoro said, is that “the broadest economic benefits directly accrue from the actual delivery and provision of health-care, not the purchase of insurance.”

Medicare for all has numerous other benefits, of course, noted Jenkins, from a streamlined system with tens of billions less in private insurance administrative waste, guaranteed choice of physician and hospital, no loss of coverage when unemployed, and no one denied coverage due to age or health status.

“Only a single-payer, expanded Medicare-for-all approach ends the current disgraceful practice of insurance companies refusing to pay for medical treatment or engaging in rampant price gouging that discourages patients from going to the doctor, seeing specialists, or getting diagnostic procedures in a timely manner,” Jenkins said.

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  1. Yana Davis Says:

    Medicare for all, or at least for all uninsured, makes a lot more sense than the Rube Goldberg-esque proposals Congress has come up with. It would be simple, easy to understand and easy to administer. Maybe that’s why Congress hasn’t thought much about it.

  2. Glynn Wilson Says:

    You are probably right about that, but Congress may be thinking too much, not too little. Always working a political angle rather than simply solving problems…