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Oct 30 2009, 4:34 pm

Health Care Bills And Deficits

It's easy to get cynical about the process of the health care bills.  At this point, I'd say that conservative and liberal health care analysts both know the score.  Everyone knows that this bill won't work as advertised:  it will not cover as many people as promised, and it will run into budget shortfalls, if for no other reason than because Congress is not going to enact the cuts as written--they will get lobbied into repealing many of them.  Doug Elmendorf has done everything but hire a skywriter to make it clear that he doesn't think that any of the various bills will actually be deficit neutral--while doing his job, which is to score what's written, not his best guess at what will happen.

Liberals don't care, because they think it's worth it to cover more people.  Conservatives care, but their kabuki complaints about what everyone in the wonkosphere knows go mostly unheeded.  I find it hard to get too outraged about any of it; I'm against the bill, but I think that this part of the process is playing out about as well as you can expect.

But then you have moments like the one I experienced the other night, in which I sat in a room full of journalists from various sectors who are not quite as deep into the policy weeds as I am--they're political reporters, not wonks.  Good political reporters.  Very well informed political reporters.  And some of the questions really frightened me.

In quick succession, they asked a prominent budget wonk questions like:

1)  How come, if so much of the money that's available to be wrung out of the health care system is going to doctors and hospitals, Obama is attacking insurers?

2)  How this could possibly provoke a fiscal crisis if the CBO was scoring the bills as deficit neutral?

 . . . there were more, but I stopped writing in despair.

This stuff isn't even controversial.  I don't think that Ezra Klein or Jon Cohn would have a problem admitting that we'll be in big fiscal trouble if Congress behaves in the future as it has behaved in the past, or that the insurance industry isn't really hoarding big stacks of cash, and other stakeholders will have to take big hits in order to make any reform work.  They just think that it's worth it to cover more people, and also that this may provide a framework for future deliver services reform.  But everyone pretty much understands that whatever bill we get will not work as written.

We're all off in the woods battling over the appropriate discount rate for dynamic tax effects.  And we seem to have left a lot of more politically focused journalists behind.

I get the sense that this happens in administrations too.  The wonks understand that they have to make compromises, so they let bad policies through without a fuss in order to secure some larger agreement. (cough/steeltarrifs/cough).  The problem is, they sometimes forget to tell the political people that it's a compromise--and what the cost of that compromise is.

Comments (6)

Megan, Im sorry, but you are losing me. Are you really the oracle of truth or are you letting your personal feeling cloud your judgement? In my view their is only one solution to my health care policy confusion, a wonk off. Mono e mono, Megan Mcardle v. Jonathon Cohn/Ezra Klein (either will work for me).

I don't trust you, because your values stink.

I have lost 2 friends, they're dead, kaput, because they didn't have and couldn't afford health insurance. One was in his twenties. He was turned away from medical care because he lacked insurance and he died within hours, from a condition an emergency surgery would have fixed.

I have had more friends unable to get insurance and experience serious ill health that will probably chop years off their lives.

I have read and seen you pooh pooh this crisis.

I reject utterly your values and I think all your conclusions and analysis are rotten because your foundation is rotten.

If you want to come to the table, to be taken seriously, first commit yourself to stopping the torrent of American blood flowing down American streets.

Why are you even in the business channel?

You are a political commentator. In that sphere, ideology is okay. In business, it's just stupid, especially after an ideologically inspired crash.

minka99, you are a fraud/troll and lying about your friend. Nobody is denied care in a US ER. So, please shut up.

People are denied care in the US. Go to any doctor's office or clinic and tell them you can't pay. What do you think will happen?
EMTLA requires the provision of stabilizing emergency care, but nothing more than that.

Paul in Athens

"He was turned away from medical care because he lacked insurance"

He was turned away from a private for-profit business because he lacked the ability to pay for the services of the for-profit business owner who, would like to make a profit, as we all would. Private businesses have a right, and a responsibility to themselves, their creditors, and the owners, to turn a profit. Even "non-profit" hospitals and clinics have to make cash flow. It costs to provide medical services to someone, and they can't give it all away today for the real possibility of not being open tomorrow.

You seem to be grossly unaware of the hundreds of thousands of volunteer hours given by health care professionals every year. How dare you expect someone to give even more, and how dare anyone to expect free care.