By Kieke G. H. Okma
Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, June, 2011
It is hard to understand the European perspective on the current health reform debate in the United States without calibrating the left-right “scale” of politics in the two continents. If we were to rank political parties in Europe from, say, 1 to 10, the similar scale in America would run from 5 to 15. Thus, Europe’s middle is located at or close to America’s (extreme) left; likewise, America’s far right is way off the European chart. (That also explains why Europeans have a hard time understanding or taking seriously the Tea Party Movement.)
That political convergence of the main political parties in Europe, combined with “corporatist” policy making where governments share the responsibility for social policy making with organized stakeholders, explains why there is much less political polarization than in the United States — particularly on health care issues. European citizens, in the last quarter of the twentieth century, expected and accepted government intervention to make sure everyone has access to health care via state- sponsored or state provided arrangements. They still do. Once in place, welfare programs tend to create their own constituencies. It is hard, politically speaking, to reduce entitlements of existing programs. Even in times of economic downturn and fiscal strains, few European politicians have proposed serious cutbacks in public health spending. Leveling of growth rates of health expenditure, yes, perhaps. Experiments with a modest degree of “markets” based on consumer choice and much government regulation, maybe. But a substantial delisting of entitlements or major increases in user fees are not seriously on the agenda anywhere, especially not when such cuts would affect the elderly or people with chronic illness.
The vast majority of Europeans warmly embraced Obama’s election promise to enact universal health financing. They see universal access to health care as a social right, a crucial element of a decent society.
Two common misperceptions have generated disappointment, however. It is now clear that the 2010 health reform legislation will leave substantial numbers of Americans uninsured. The first error arose from applying the wrong political scale. The U.S. “middle of the road” is much more conservative than that in Europe, and no U.S. president can afford to be seen at the far left of the American scale. The second misunderstanding concerns the power of the American presidency. Surely, Europeans believe, the president of the most powerful country in the world can do what he sets out to do (and surely, no one could be against universal health care either). They find it hard to accept that the president’s power is bound by political institutions that make major change very difficult if not impossible.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act signed by Obama on March 23, 2010, takes on many problems. The health reform law will reduce the number of uninsured by expanding access to Medicaid and imposing restrictions on private insurers (the law also contains many other provisions that only weakly relate to health insurance reform). The step toward universal coverage, however, with effective cost control that would require a form of collective action, was one bridge too far.
http://jhppl.dukejournals.org/cgi/reprint/36/3/577?etoc
Comment:
By Don McCanne, MD
Policy is easy. Politics isn’t. For the United States, the politics of collective action on health reform has been one bridge too far. Let’s now build that bridge.