|
Just about everybody in Washington agrees individuals should be required to buy health insurance.
The trade groups all support it. Business groups
are happy to support an individual mandate so long as employers aren’t
required to pay for it. Providers, such as the American Medical
Association and American Hospital Association, like it because they
think it will help them get paid more reliably. Insurance companies
love the idea of everyone being required to buy their services. And Big
Labor likes it because most of their members are already covered.
However, when “everybody in Washington agrees” on
something it is often because they aren’t listening to the people. This
happened in 1988 when Congress passed the Medicare Catastrophic law. It
was supported by Washington-based associations such as AARP, passed by
bipartisan majorities in Congress, and signed into law by Ronald
Reagan. Slam-dunk success story.
Except when the elderly found out they were about
to be required to buy something they thought they didn’t need, they
were furious. In a famous scene, a group of elderly people chased House
Ways & Means Committee Chairman Dan Rostenkowski down the streets
of Chicago and beat on his car with their canes and picket signs when
he tried to escape. Eighteen months after it was passed, the law was
repealed.
That is a harbinger of the reaction to come when
working people find they are required to buy coverage they don’t think
they need — and it won’t be a mere smattering of elderly people this
time. About 20 percent of the people in California are uninsured, 25
percent of Texans, and similarly huge numbers in almost every other
state.
People in Washington, DC assume the uninsured are
“clogging the emergency rooms” of the nation’s hospitals, but in fact
they use ERs at a lower rate than fully insured people, especially
those on Medicaid.
Washington policymakers may think it is good for everybody to have coverage, but the people don’t agree.
It isn’t just the cost. About one-third of the
uninsured are already eligible for free coverage from Medicaid and the
State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) but don’t find the
programs worth enrolling in. And it’s not that they don’t know about
the programs. A study in Health Affairs found one-third of all
uninsured children had been enrolled in Medicaid or SCHIP within the
previous year but their parents decided not to reenroll them.
Similarly, a very large percentage of young,
uninsured adults are already eligible for coverage on the job but don’t
sign up even though their employers are paying most of the cost. They
have better things to do with their money. They rarely see a doctor and
are already covered for what is most likely to happen to them: auto
accidents and workplace injuries.
The American people are not required to buy food,
clothing, or shelter. Why in the world should they be required to buy
health insurance?
If Washington says we must buy health insurance
before we pay the rent, feed the kids, or buy gas to get to work, there
will be a rebellion that makes Rostenkowski’s encounter look like a
church picnic.
|