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Nov 2 2009, 12:57 pm

The True Cost of the House Health Care Bill

The New York Times health care blog has a post about the games that politicians are playing with the cost of their health care bill--in this case, the new House bill that was initially reported as costing less than $900 billion.  A more accurate assessment would have been $1.05 trillion:

Throughout Thursday, news accounts, including our own, focused on $894 billion, the total cost given out by aides to the House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, before the official cost analysis was released by the Congressional Budget Office.

 

But a closer look at the budget office report suggests that the number everyone should have reported was $1.055 trillion, which is the gross cost of the insurance coverage provisions in the bill before taking account of certain new revenues, including penalties by individuals and employers who fail to meet new insurance requirements in the bill.

Because Obama set a $900 billion target--probably sensibly, since the politics of a $1 trillion health care bill are tricky--the House wanted to get their proposal under that line.  The problem is, they also want to subsidize lots and lots of people, which is expensive.

I expect that the reaction of many people, maybe even most, is "Who cares whether we use gross or net cost, as long as it's deficit neutral?"  I'm sympathetic, but there really are very good reasons to care:

1.  This bill will not actually deficit neutral; it's just scored deficit neutral.  This is not the fault of the CBO, which is doing its job.  But the bills are loaded down with a bunch of "automatic spending cuts" and similar gimmicks which are very unlikely to happen.  We did the same thing with Medicare in the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, and by 2003--i.e., the first year that the cuts really started to cut--Congress had mostly undone them. 

Doug Elmendorf, the source of that "deficit neutral" score, has made it pretty clear that he does not think the cuts will take place; he's just scoring them because that's what the CBO process requires him to do.  After all, the reason that we need these automatic spending cut mechanisms is that Congress can't make a credible committment to cut costs now.  And the reason they can't be relied upon to cut costs in the future is that doing so is politically costly.

The larger the gross cost, the larger the hole it will rip in the budget if these gimmicks fail.

2.  We have a gigantic existing budget deficit, which will require hundreds of billions of dollars worth of spending cuts or tax increases.  I call your attention to the chart I posted the other week, showing what the budget deficit would look like with and without the Baucus Bill:

Deficits.pngIn other words, even if everything in this "deficit neutral" bill happens the way that the CBO expects it too, we still end up with a $600 billion deficit.  We need to pay for that, somehow.

But of course, keeping the bill "deficit neutral" also requires some combination of tax increases and spending cuts.  These are very politically difficult, and as is generally true, the current bills use the ones that are politically easiest to cover their costs:  things like tax increases on the rich, cuts to unpopular provider reimbursements, and rejiggering Medicare Advantage.  Yes, these things are not easy--some of them are so hard that they may not happen.  But whatever comes after them must, almost definitionally, politically even more difficult to pass.  In the case of tax increases on the rich, there is simply an economic limit--the Laffer Curve does not apply at current levels of US taxation, but that doesn't mean it doesn't apply at any level of taxation, and we're already headed to marginal income tax rates of more than 50% in some jurisdictions.

So the larger the gross cost, the more of the political "low hanging fruit" it eats up.  That means that closing our existing budget deficit becomes more politically costly, and therefore less likely to happen--or, rather, more likely to happen too late, when the crisis is almost upon us.

3.  Even if you are not particularly worried about shrinking the existing budget deficit, gross costs are, well, costs.  Tax increases reduce the consumption people are able to do, of either goods or leisure.  Benefit cuts mean fewer benefits.  This has to be considered against the benefits.

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Comments (5)

Paul in Athens

This is looking more and more like a freight train barreling down on a bridge collapse ahead. The engineer isn't paying attention to the track conditions, but busily telling folks what a "smooth ride" they can expect for the rest of their journey. The other people in the engine are so busy shoveling coal into the furnace to keep up speed, they aren't looking at track conditions either.

Some on the train are calling for a slow-down of the speed of the train, while others shout out "full speed ahead". While the engine and the first cars plunge over the cliff, the folks in the caboose are partying away. Oblivious to their impending fate.

TARP was supposed to pay us back, and "even make a few bucks", remember? Now we're down $2.3 billion with the CIT bankruptcy. One only can wonder what this "reform" will end up costing us all in the end.

It ain't over till the fat lady sings, and she's got strep. So when she does sing, it ain't gonna be pretty.

AngryMobVoter

The idea of government run healthcare is a joke. Just look at the VA. Look at Medicare. Both are poorly run and result in bad care. The current administration likes to attack the insurance industry while they are in bed with the drug companies. The drug companies will still be able to charge Americans the highest prices in the world for drugs and make far higher profit margins than the insurance industry. At the same time the current administration is doing nothing about tort reform which would yield substantial cost savings without degrading or rationing care. The two biggest areas of potential savings are drug prices and tort reform. The current administration is in bed with the drug companies and attorneys so little of that savings will ever be realized. Also, union members will not have to be concerned about their plans while the rest of us will pay for it.
VOTE THEM OUT!

The main point is how the Obama administration and Congress have destroyed the financial future of future generations to come. The current economic policies are reckless and will result in insurmountable economic problems in the future. This administration has mortgaged the future just to get an economic blip up that will last until the next presidential election. The numbers do not add up and Obama is just politics as usual.

We are experiencing the biggest intrusion into our private lives in the history of the country and the biggest perversion of our economic system as well. Obama is pointing us to a future of stagnation. It is time to VOTE THEM OUT!

The "intrusion" that most people notice is the rising medical costs (at twice the inflation rate) and the lowering coverage (to increase profits).

We can afford to WASTE $1 Trillion on war, but covering our own citizens health is a waste?

Double speak at its worst.

The current plan is far more "conservative" than what Nixon (trhat flaming liberal, who knew?) proposed 40 years ago.

Paul in Athens

The war will end, but health care spending will continue into eternity at an ever faster rate of growth.

Oh yes, the CBO isn't factoring the loss of tax revenues this program, if suceeeful, will bring. When they say "cut costs" well, that's someone's salary you're talking about, or their profits, or their dividends. All income mind you, that gets taxed. Cut their income and you cut tax revenues too. If insurance policy pemiums come down, well, insurance agents get a percentage of the premium as compensation, so their income would go down. If doctors, hospitals and other medical service providers are subjected to decreasing paymets, well, that's their profit, or someone's salary that needs to be cut. Lower income means lower tax on that income.

So let's pretend that this proposal (pick whichever one is your favorite) decreases health care costs by 10%. That's 10% less income for everyone in the healthcare system. Nurses, billing clerks, pharmacists, orderlies, doctors, receptionists, the hospital support staff, drug reps, ambulance drivers, the guy working the line at the medical equipment manufacturing plant. All would see some decrease in their income. All would pay less taxes.

Investors, including your retirement plan, would see decreases in health related stock values, as well as decreased returns on your investments. That is, if the proposals do what they claim and reduce costs, which reduce income, which reduce taxes.

And all that lost income trickles down through the economy. With less income comes less spending, which relates to less income for someone else. It's a vicious cycle, one that we've seen and are still seeing.

The CBO data does not account for that loss of tax revenues. The democrats won't even acknowledge that possibility.

Here is all you need to know about the reliability of these (or any) government estimates:

The estimated cost for Medicare Part D went up 40% between the time the bill was passed and the first payment of benefits.

A word to the wise suffices: ten thousand wise words will not convince a fool.

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