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Sunday, June 03, 2007

Krugman Says Single-Payer System the Only Way to Go in Health Care Reform

The good news is that we know more about the economics of health care than we did when Clinton tried and failed to remake the system. There's now a large body of evidence on what works and what doesn't work in health care, and it's not hard to see how to make dramatic improvements in US practice.

As we'll see, the evidence clearly shows that the key problem with the US health care system is its fragmentation. A history of failed attempts to introduce universal health insurance has left us with a system in which the government pays directly or indirectly for more than half of the nation's health care, but the actual delivery both of insurance and of care is undertaken by a crazy quilt of private insurers, for-profit hospitals, and other players who add cost without adding value.

A Canadian-style single-payer system, in which the government directly provides insurance, would almost surely be both cheaper and more effective than what we now have. And we could do even better if we learned from "integrated" systems, like the Veterans Administration, that directly provide some health care as well as medical insurance. --Paul Krugman and Robin Wells in the New York Review of Books

Read the entire article. It's comprehensive, detailed and persuasive. With the Governor's task force currently considering the results of Mathematica's study of three alternatives for reforming health care coverage in New Mexico, now's the time for ordinary folks to get more informed on what works and what doesn't. This article is a good start. I think Governor Richardson, his staff  and those involved with any aspect of health care in the state should read it too.

More nuggest from the article:

... the available evidence suggests that if the United States were to replace its current complex mix of health insurance systems with standardized, universal coverage, the savings would be so large that we could cover all those currently uninsured, yet end up spending less overall. That's what happened in Taiwan, which adopted a single-payer system in 1995: the percentage of the population with health insurance soared from 57 percent to 97 percent, yet health care costs actually grew more slowly than one would have predicted from trends before the change in system.

... In summary, then, the obvious way to make the US health care system more efficient is to make it more like the systems of other advanced countries, and more like the most efficient parts of our own system. That means a shift from private insurance to public insurance, and greater government involvement in the provision of health care—if not publicly run hospitals and clinics, at least a much larger government role in creating integrated record-keeping and quality control. Such a system would probably allow individuals to purchase additional medical care, as they can in Britain (although not in Canada). But the core of the system would be government insurance—"Medicare for all," as Ted Kennedy puts it.

... We believe that the compromise plans being proposed by the cautious reformers would run into the same political problems [as Bill Clinton's did], and that it would be politically smarter as well as economically superior to go for broke: to propose a straightforward single-payer system, and try to sell voters on the huge advantages such a system would bring. But this would mean taking on the drug and insurance companies rather than trying to co-opt them, and even progressive policy wonks, let alone Democratic politicians, still seem too timid to do that.

So are we stuck with a less than effective reform climate because of the timidity of Democrats? Oh, no, not again.... Political timidity: our most prevalent and dangerous problem.

June 3, 2007 at 03:00 PM in Economy, Populism, Healthcare | Permalink

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