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Michael Collins
09-10-2009, 08:25 AM
It's not pretty ...


http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v474/autorank/Articles/medicare1.jpg

1965 - President Lyndon Johnson signs Medicare bill while President Harry Truman looks on. Truman signed up for Medicare right away. Image

Address to Congress

Michael Collins
http://electionfraudnews.com/MichaelCollins.htm
(With links: http://smirkingchimp.com/thread/23731 )


President Obama closed his address to the joint session of Congress by scolding those who have raised the absurd charges regarding his health care initiative. It was well timed and diverted attention from fundamental flaws in his proposal.

This article examines the Obama plan as outlined in his speech. His goals were clear and the speech was well structured. The heart of the address provides the type of information necessary to judge the merits of the plan as presented.

Obama got serious when he said, "The plan I'm announcing tonight would meet three basic goals:

"It will provide more security and stability to those who have health insurance.

"It will provide insurance to those who don't.

"And it will slow the growth of health care costs for our families, our businesses, and our government." Pres. Barack Obama, Sept. 9

Cost and availability are the core issues in health care today. They subsume all others. What's missing here? Instead of universal coverage, the uninsured get "insurance," most likely private insurance, if they can afford it. Instead of beating back prices or bold initiatives to reduce them, we're hearing "slow the growth." Health care costs are unaffordable to many already. The promise here seems to be that they'll still be unaffordable, just less so.

"Bending the curve" may happen but it fails to address the key problem -- people can't afford insurance rates and medical bills. As a result they get sick more, suffer more, and die before their time.

"Here are the details that every American needs to know about this plan"

Obama detailed the impact of his plan on two distinct groups, those currently with insurance and those without. This is a key distinction since the public option, for example, is available to only those without insurance.

Those with Insurance

Those with insurance were promised that "nothing in our plan requires you to change what you have." That's assuring to some. But to others who lave plans that are too expensive, plans purchased directly from insurance carriers, there may be a desire or need to change to a more affordable plan. You're out of luck. Let's say that you own a small business and pay $1200 an employee a month for health insurance. The plan offers no apparent benefit other than slowing "the growth of health care costs."

The plan will offer four ways "to make the insurance you have work better for you." It will: get rid of preexisting conditions as a reason to deny coverage; bar insurance companies from dropping coverage due to a major illness; limit "out of pocket" expenses; and require coverage for preventative care. These are all positive steps.

That's it for "security and stability." You can stay in your current plan. You can go elsewhere with certain long overdue guarantees of coverage but for those insured, there's no freedom to choose a Medicare-like public option or use the insurance "exchange" There's no security that you will ever see affordable health care.

Health insurance and pharmaceutical companies who have jacked up prices at record setting rates will be unimpeded.

The health care "exchange" that was part of Obama's campaign proposal is not available to those with insurance:

"But an additional step we can take to keep insurance companies honest is by making a not-for-profit public option available in the insurance exchange. Let me be clear – it would only be an option for those who don't have insurance." Sept. 9

We're left to assume that "keeping the "insurance companies honest" is only a benefit saved for those citizens who are uninsured.

Those without Insurance

Those without insurance will be offered membership in "one big group" that will leverage their numbers to drive competition from insurance companies on a public "insurance exchange." The exchange aims to fulfill a huge promise:

"If you strike out on your own and start a small business, you will be able to get coverage. We will do this by creating a new insurance exchange – a marketplace where individuals and small businesses will be able to shop for health insurance at competitive prices." Sept. 9

What if you don't have a job? What if you have a job but can't afford the prices on the "exchange?" This was not addressed.

The president elaborated his argument for the "exchange:"

"Insurance companies will have an incentive to participate in this exchange because it lets them compete for millions of new customers." Sept. 9

Who are the members of this group that the insurance companies will so desire? They're the uninsured, the people who get sicker more frequently and have great medical needs because they're uninsured. Is that an appealing market for companies who are in the business of excluding sick people? Is there some major group of very healthy uninsured ready to balance out the generally poor, low income uninsured?

To further bolster the insurance "exchange," Obama offered this argument:

"As one big group, these customers will have greater leverage to bargain with the insurance companies for better prices and quality coverage. This is how large companies and government employees get affordable insurance." Sept. 9

No it isn't. The largest companies have "self funded" health insurance plans. They don't buy insurance coverage from the Blue Crosses of the world. They set up a fund for benefits that pays for employee health care. They hire out the administration of benefits to private insurance companies who issue checks and reimbursements but that money is from large companies. The entire "exchange" argument is based on a factual error. Since the assumption of competition underlies the "exchange," the plan crumbles for those without insurance.

Percent of workers in self-insured companies
http://electionfraudnews.com/News/US/selfins.gif
From Exhibit 10.1 Kaiser Family Foundation 2008 (p. 162)

Why would companies do this? Because self funded plans save money by cutting out insurance company profits as an operating cost. Self funded plans also provide more control of expenditures. There are no $800,000 a day salaries for plan employees as we've seen at insurance companies.

The underlying premise for the insurance exchange for the uninsured is flawed operationally and factually. So how will people pay for this coverage?

Tax credits! We're told that, "For those individuals and small businesses who still cannot afford the lower-priced insurance available in the exchange, we will provide tax credits, the size of which will be based on your need."

Who will be in the exchange and what can they afford with or without tax credits?

The Distribution of the Uninsured and Total U.S. Population by Income
http://electionfraudnews.com/News/US/selfinsinc.jpg
72% of the uninsured are below the income level required

to afford
employer health insurance. Based on U.S. Census Bureau data, 2005 Link

This augmented chart shows an estimate of the income level required for the uninsured to afford a "company insurance plan." Self funded plans covered 54% of those insured (p. 162) at the time this data was collected. According to the study, an individual needs income of 300% of the federal poverty level, $27,000 to afford "employer insurance." A family of four needs an income of 300% of the federal poverty level for families or $57,000 for "employer" insurance. This study didn't presume an insurance "exchange" but the analysis is applicable as a model for answers we need to determine the ability of people to purchase insurance under the president's proposal.

Even if everything worked perfectly for the uninsured, the president said, "This exchange will take effect in four years, which will give us time to do it right." If that's the criterion, do it right, it will take a lot longer than four more years before the uninsured benefit.

With a flawed basis for the exchange, no mandatory participation by insurance companies, no price controls, and a poorer, less healthy "big group," what chance is there that the very limited public option proposed will be "be self-sufficient and rely on the premiums it collects" as Obama requires? What chance is there that private insurance companies will be more inclined than they are today to insure those that they don't want to insure?

What about Medicare?

Medicare is a well liked plan with lower administrative costs, and no requirements for shareholder returns. It's also much less intrusive in care decisions than private insurance plans. But that's not in the cards. The president said:

"Since health care represents one-sixth of our economy, I believe it makes more sense to build on what works and fix what doesn't, rather than try to build an entirely new system from scratch." Sept. 9

Medicare is a national program in operation since 1965. It provides universal health care for those 65 and older. It faces challenges from the bulge in beneficiaries that don't negate its lower unit costs, lower administrative fees, and high satisfaction rate. Medicare would be even more effective in delivering improved health if seniors were it able to negotiate discounted drug rates with the major drug companies. But Congress outlawed that in 2004. That wasn't mentioned as part of the plan. Why?

In his apparent attempt to preserve the private health insurance industry and to appease the major pharmaceutical companies, the president missed a key lesson from the market place.

When large companies want to save money on employee health costs, they get rid of the private insurance companies. As a result, they save money and often offer more coverage. They save even more money bypassing the built in cost of insurance company profits and excessive CEO compensation.

Medicare is the big company self funded plans writ large. In fact, you could argue that the Medicare approach of direct funding for "the big group" of seniors was the model for self funded big company health plans.

Isn't it time to stand back and reevaluate the entire process?

Isn't it time to say no to more corporate welfare?

How many more bailouts can we take?

END

This article may be reproduced in whole or in part with attribution of authorship and a link to this article.

hb
09-11-2009, 05:12 AM
did you put this up at DU? very nice.

Michael Collins
09-11-2009, 11:13 PM
did you put this up at DU? very nice.


Thanks! No, didn't post it there. PeoplesVoice.org, Chimp, Agonist, OpEdNews. American Politics Journal, etc. Peopleliked it since apparently there wasn't much in depth analysis out there.

I heard a short interview on c-span today with a Democratic Congresswoman from Maryland pushing the plan. Guess what she said - exchanges are great because they'll have this great pool of 40 million or so people who can negotiate with insurance to keep rates down. She want on to say, that's how the big companies do it. What an idiot. That is so utrue, it is offensive. Big companies are self-funded.

The only parts of this that will pass are the parts that bail out the insurance companies.

The only question is how to help the people understand that this is a fraud and how to link this bailout with the Wall Street versions so it becomes abundantly clear who gets all the "change" people were promised.

choppedliver
09-12-2009, 11:06 AM
I shared it with my single payer groups here in upstate ny. Thanks!!

chlamor
09-13-2009, 09:18 PM
Looks like it's been posted over yonder...

http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x6542019

Michael Collins
09-18-2009, 04:44 AM
Looks like it's been posted over yonder...

http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x6542019


Hey, thanks. I've been mired in the 3-D world but I like the article and I especially like Orwellian_Ghost, a true underground poster.

I visited your blog and wrote a long reply to your question. Then found out that I had to use my google id, which is too revealing;) Most places I can leave Collins and a url.

Anyway, here it is 9I saved it!):

Clamor

We had no choice in 2008. The Clinton-Bush Clan went down to defeat by the Obama-Solomon Bros. Clan and that was that. There were a few points to be made, very few. Clinton's primary campaign racism didn't work. Vote stealing didn't work, in terms of the outcome, although the margin of victory was shaved enough to make this turnout no different than 2004.

Those are minor given the stakes. From the monent Geithner was appointed, it was over (or simply following the preplanned triumph of The Money Party).

I voted for Obama as a vote against outright fascism. I had no expectations that Obama would work out in any positive way. But I am glad tons of new voters showed up, at least in the primaries. This is extremely important in terms of building expectations. People expect this guy to produce and he won't, can't, would not now what to produce if he could.

I don't have an obligation to hold Obama's feet to the fire or for what he does. For all I know, my vote disappeared into the nanosphere and wasn't even counted. Nevertheless, I do what I can to expose the sham that is our current government. I don't often mention Obama's name since he's not important, it's a meaningless label and feeds into looking at the rulers as 'personalities.' I could care less what they're like or if I'd' want to have them as neighbors.

As for the "believers," Obama has a responsibility to them, which will not be fulfilled. The voters have a responsibility to let him know that.

I think that they will. When you sell "hope" and "change" and you deliver the same old same old, it really pisses people off. That's the first step. The healthcare debate has raised the issue of government versus corporate efficiencies and the people remain steadfast in their desire for decent medical care from the government. This is the key battle in turning the tide. The question was raised. Whatever happens, the answer will be -- government health care programs available to all. And that's a good start.

(btw, The foreign policy debate is over. Nobody supports this senseless war in Afghanistan.)

Michael Collins
09-18-2009, 04:49 AM
I shared it with my single payer groups here in upstate ny. Thanks!!


Great. Hope it helped. I have not seen my points raised that much. I'm stunned that the 4 year wait wasn't jumped on.

The usual cast of characters are coming out to shill for Obama.

Thanks OK. People know what it's like to be without health care or with inadequate coverage. No smiles and good words will change that.

One of the best things I saw out there was a May blog by David Sirota. He said something like this - The fact that the insurance companies promised $2 trillion or so of savings over the next 10 years simply tells us that they've been screwing us over royally for the past 10 years.' That really ended the debate, on a logical level, far in advance of any plan that included these same scoundrel insurance companies. Great question, isn't it?