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NAVIGATION PNHP RESOURCES
Posted on July 9, 2002

Paying For National Health Insurance-And Not Getting It

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Health Affairs July/August 2002

by Steffie Woolhandler and David U. Himmelstein

Most Americans have private health insurance. Citizens of most other wealthy nations have national health insurance. Hence the perception that those nations' health care systems are public while ours is private. But these labels obscure the predominance of private medical practice and hospitals in Canada and most European countries and the dominance of tax-financed health care in the United States. ... Americans now pay higher taxes per capita for financing health care than do any other nation's citizens.

The huge role of the government in financing American health care is obscured by the fact that nearly one-third of these tax dollars meander through private insurers on their way to the patient's bedside. What originates as taxes paid by private households ends up as recycled "private" spending in the CMS accounts (Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services). Insurance firms not only siphon off overhead and profits in the process, they also inflict huge paperwork burdens and costs on providers. We have detailed these costs in the past. For 1999 we estimate that health administration spending was more than $309 billion. At least half of this could have been saved through a shift to national health insurance. Disinterested civil servants, and even skeptics, agree that U.S. health care costs need not rise under national health insurance because administrative savings would roughly offset the increased costs of care for today's uninsured and underinsured persons.

While national health insurance wouldn't cost Americans more, it would mean that taxes would pay a bigger share of health care costs and that private insurance and patients would pay a smaller share. Yet government now spends far more on health care-and national health insurance would require a smaller tax increase -than most Americans believe. The step from our current level of tax financing -59.8 percent-to Canada or Australia's 70 percent is less steep than the CMS figures on public spending imply. About $130 billion per year-the amount of the recent tax cuts-would get us from here to there.

<http://www.healthaffairs.org/>http://www.healthaffairs.org/ (For non-subscribers, the abstract is available.)

Comment: It is crucial to understand that an increase in taxes to fund national health insurance does NOT mean that health care costs are increased. Numerous studies have demonstrated that the administrative savings produced by converting from our inefficient system, which includes the fragmented health plan marketplace, to a single national health insurance program would fund all current care PLUS the voids in care that now exist. Net spending would not increase.

Then why would health care taxes increase? The current inequitable private financing of our heath care system through direct payments, insurance premiums, businesses' indirect costs of health care transferred to consumer products and services, and a myriad of other hidden costs of health care would be dramatically reduced. This dysfunctional system of funding health care would be displaced by a tax system specifically designed to establish equity in the funding of health care.

Our tax system already funds half again as much as our private funding of health care. But even in the publicly funded sector, we have neglected equity. Perhaps the most egregious example is the regressive nature of the deductibility of employer premium payments. Tax systems have a moral and ethical mandate to establish equity. We should demand equity, not only in the current tax funding, but in the funding of our entire health care system by accepting a modest increase in taxes balanced with a reduction in administrative waste and a reduction in the inequity of private funding. It won't cost us any more, but it would establish fairness for all of us.

And, oh... yes... Accomplishing this through a national health insurance program would have one additional benefit: comprehensive, affordable health care for everyone.