作者pursuistmi (common people)
看板IA
標題[新聞] 經濟學家看衰兩黨候選人醫療健康政策
時間Thu Sep 18 22:52:36 2008
標題:Economists take critical view of health plans
Report: McCain won't reduce uninsured, Obama won't lower costs
AP
WASHINGTON - John McCain's health plan won't lower the ranks of the
uninsured. Barack Obama's fails to curb the soaring cost of health care,
meaning initial gains in helping more people buy health insurance would
eventually be undermined.
That's the assessment of health care economists who critiqued the plans of
the two presidential candidates.
The critiques, published in the journal Health Affairs on Tuesday, reflect
fundamental disagreements over how to improve access to health coverage. They
also sound warnings about what could go wrong with each candidate's plan.
McCain would dramatically reshape the way millions of people get health
insurance. The Republican would do away with income tax breaks for health
insurance obtained through the work place, instead treating the payments as
taxable wages.
In exchange, he would give people a $2,500 tax credit for individuals who buy
health insurance and a $5,000 tax credit for families that do so.
The tax credit could help people buy insurance through their employer. Many
would also use it buy coverage directly from insurers in the individual
market. They could select from insurers licensed in any state. With more
competition, costs would fall and quality would increase, McCain reasons.
Analysts writing in the journal warned against that approach.
They said employers would be less likely to offer coverage if they knew their
workers could get it elsewhere. In all, the authors projected that 20 million
people would lose their employer-sponsored insurance under McCain's plan,
while 21 million people would gain coverage through the individual market —
little more than a wash.
And as monthly insurance premiums rise and the tax break stays the same, even
that gain would erode.
Another concern is that insurers would gravitate to states with less onerous
coverage requirements. For example, 29 states insist insurers in the
individual and small group market cover cervical cancer screenings. They
could locate in states without such requirements.
Obama wants the government to subsidize the cost of health coverage for
millions who otherwise would have trouble affording it on their own.
The Democrat would set up a kind of government-run shopping mall that would
negotiate prices and benefits with private insurers. One choice would be a
government-run plan. No participating company could turn someone away because
of pre-existing cancer, heart disease or diabetes. Nor would someone have to
pay a higher monthly premium based on those conditions.
The government would subsidize the cost for many who buy coverage through
this exchange. But analysts say using third parties to subsidize the cost of
a product exacerbates health inflation. Consumers and providers act as if any
service that might yield some value should be covered. After all, it's
largely somebody else who is picking up the tab.
"Any major expansion of coverage will be costly, and the Obama promise of
affordability would require new, large, and rapidly growing federal subsidies
that are unlikely to be sustainable, fiscally or politically," said the
authors.
Obama would also require all but small businesses to make a "meaningful"
payment for health coverage of their workers or contribute a percentage of
payroll toward the cost of the public plan offered through the exchange. The
authors said that either way, job losses or pay cuts would result.
The journal subjected the plans to a sort of devil's advocate analysis. Once
the unsolicitated review of McCain's plan was reviewed and accepted, the
journal sought out economists who would take a similarly tough look at the
Obama plan. The reviewers of the Obama plan included Gail Wilensky, an unpaid
adviser to the McCain campaign.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may
not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26735251/
新聞來源: (需有正確連結)
--
--
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc)
◆ From: 220.129.162.58
※ 編輯: pursuistmi 來自: 220.129.162.58 (09/18 22:53)
※ 編輯: pursuistmi 來自: 140.123.43.212 (09/19 14:11)