INTERVIEW WITH STUART M. BUTLER
No: Expanding a Program We Can’t Pay for Is a Mistake
Should there be Medicare for All?
No. There should be a program that provides affordable, adequate access to health care for everyone, but I don’t think Medicare for All is the right way to achieve that objective. First, Medicare itself is out of balance financially, and expanding a program that we can’t pay for by adding more people is not good for the nation. Second, there’s a lot of magical thinking about Medicare for All—as if it gives inexpensive or even free care and somehow you can also make the numbers work for taxpayers. That’s really not the case. And third, most working Americans have health care through work or through the Obamacare exchanges, and politically it will be very difficult to scrap what they are used to. A more effective approach would build on what we have and allow continuous experimentation through waivers for states. We’re doing that already with the exchanges and with Medicaid. I opposed Obamacare as it was going through, but not because I was against the basic approach, which was not that different from the approach of many Republicans. Obamacare made significant improvements and filled in a lot of gaps, and that’s how Americans like things done. They don’t like radical change.
If the U.S. health care system were a separate economy, it would be the fifth largest in the world, bigger than Britain’s. So to say we’re going to change that with a Medicare for All bill in Congress, enacted the way things are done in Congress nowadays—I mean, what could possibly go wrong?
What’s worth saving in the health care system we have? What are the gaps?
A lot of conservatives had argued for a loose marketplace of subsidized health plans in each region. That’s what the exchange system does. I would like to see that expanding over time and the employer-based system shrinking. I think Medicare is a crown jewel—especially Medicare Advantage, where you pick a private plan, and it has to provide the equivalent of Medicare benefits.The plan managers get a fixed amount per enrollee and can redesign or restructure the services. A third of retirees and almost half of new enrollees are in such plans. If Senator Bernie Sanders were talking about Medicare Advantage for All, then I think we could have a conversation. But he isn’t.
On coverage, we’ve lost some ground. When Obamacare was put in place, states were required to cover all lower-income adults by expanding Medicaid. The Supreme Court overturned that, so now it’s optional for states. A lot of people now fall through the gaps—they don’t qualify for subsidies or Medicaid, but they can’t afford the exchanges. Obamacare also included a commission to get Medicare back on track financially. That’s been repealed, so we don’t have good ways to tamp down its costs. Sanders doesn’t emphasize cost control. People on the left have opposed every serious step to control Medicare costs, but now they say, “Give us Medicare for All and we’ll get the costs under control later.”
Why is health care so expensive? Can government help?
A lot of the high charges mean literally nothing. As a health economist, I’m amazed at them. The real question is, what is Medicare going to pay? If you look at your benefit statements, Medicare pays just a fraction. Government can help rein in costs by setting a real budget in the programs it administers. It flinches from it, for instance in Medicare, but it could. Government can also alter the tax subsidies to make them more efficient.
Is health care a moral right?
I use the term “community right,” which means that as a society evolves, people collectively begin to feel certain things are a right of membership. We say we have a right to a K-12 education, but you can go to other parts of the world where it’s clearly not a community right. Today we see affordable access to basic health services as a community right of that kind.
Do Jewish ethics say anything about access to health care?
Absolutely. The notion that we treat the stranger the same as ourselves is really important. There’s a very strong Jewish impulse to deal with these gaps. I know a lot of people on the progressive side who are Jewish, and we have a slightly different conversation together about health care than we would with others, starting from Jewish premises of what the goal should be and what is just, even if we disagree intensely on how to get there. Health care is a moral issue, an economic issue and a technical issue, and you have to get each one right. I don’t know of any Jews who don’t think everyone should be covered to an adequate level. But we disagree on how. For instance, on covering high-risk populations who run up high costs: The Obama administration said those people can’t be charged more for insurance. The problem is that if you’re an insurer, you don’t want them. People on the right might say, let’s set up a different program for high-cost people and subsidize it directly, and don’t raise other people’s premiums. This administration thinks that’s a much better way. That’s a very appropriate, vigorous and sometimes acrimonious debate, and there are Jewish friends of mine on both sides, but we all want to get these people covered, and that’s the agreed moral bottom line.
I have to say that many on the right who raise appropriate technical challenges about ways of covering people are then accused of not wanting to have them covered. I’ve faced that accusation often, and I resent it. I don’t like people who don’t know me reading things into my policy positions.
One thought on “Debate | Should There Be Medicare for All?”
we don’t have to read anything into your decisions… it is right there in front of us