Cruise Control

Take this conservative argument on health care seriously.

When conservatives scream about socialized medicine and death panels, you should tune them out. But lately conservatives have been making an argument you should hear. It's about whether we can believe Congress when it promises to raise taxes or cut spending--and, as such, whether we can believe that health care reform can actually be fiscally responsible.

As you may know, many promoters of health care reform say that the proposals in Congress will pay for themselves and, over the long run, actually reduce what we spend, as taxpayers and as a society. As proof, they point to (among other things) a series of changes in the way Medicare pays for services--changes that would, over time, pay the providers of medical care less and, accordingly, restrain the growth in overall Medicare spending. They also cite a reduction in the tax subsidy for the most generous health job-based insurance policies, or so-called "Cadillac plans." Experts believe this will induce employers and employees to seek out cheaper, more efficient insurance arrangements.

The Congressional Budget Office agrees that these measures would save the government money. (CBO doesn't predict the effect on health care spending overall, but it's a reasonable inference.) Still, the CBO delivered that judgment with a caveat: Cost control will only work if future lawmakers let those changes take effect. As CBO noted--and as conservatives have been arguing, in some cases very loudly--that's hardly a sure thing.

A big reason for doubt is the fate of a law called the "Sustainable Growth Rate." SGR is basically an effort to set a hard budget on physician payments in Medicare. After any year when Medicare reimbursements grew more quickly than the SGR, the government is supposed to cut those payments back. But thanks in no small part to physician lobbying, Congress has in recent years flinched at letting the cuts go into effect, instead passing yearly "postponements."

You can see where this argument is going. If politicians in Washington aren't willing to let the SGR take effect, why should we believe they'd be willing to let the planned Medicare reductions and insurance taxes take effect? It's a good question. But, it turns out, there are some good answers, as well.

For starters, the policies are structured differently. The SGR is a cut, plain and simple, that would affect physicians no matter how they changed their behavior. The planned Medicare reductions are part of a broader package, full of financial incentives that should, at least in theory, reward more efficient care. There would be bonuses, for example, that would reward the formation of integrated groups that deliver more coordinated chronic care. Similarly, both employers and employees would be able to avoid paying the Cadillac tax by shifting to plans that don't cost as much.

Severity and timing of the changes is another distinction. At least today, SGR is a joke because--if it went into effect--the reduction in physician payments would be a highly disruptive 20 percent. The adjustments in the new reform law would be less stark and, in the case of the insurance tax, less direct. The Cadillac tax falls on the insurer, not the individual. That ought to soften the political blow--not entirely, for sure, but perhaps enough to make a difference.

Page 1 of 2

COMMENTS (4)

11/05/2009 - 1:37pm EDT |

I'm amazed at your unwillingness to evaluate the facts.

Zeke Emmanuel and Peter Orhzag both agree: major cause of rapid health care costs is early and broad adoption of new technologies (drugs, devises and procedures) and that these "payment" schemes (accountable care organizations, home health) will not work

MedPac evaluated ACO's, with two conclusions: one, with ten or so trial runs-they cost more and two, you can't devise voluntary programs and involuntary programs won't work

Health care reform won't pay for itself-you know, HR3200 had the SGR override, costing roughly $250 billion over ten years. SGR reform is integral to health care reform. It's gaming the numbers to place SGR re ... view full comment

11/05/2009 - 6:49pm EDT |

Excuse me if I don’t get a warm a fuzzy feeling about the Government’s ability to control costs. The authors are hedging their bets on every point.

“ If……”, “Should, at least in theory…”, “have, from time to time….”, “later backed off….” , “The same seems true today”, “That doesn’t mean….” “should make it easier….”, “there are never guarantees.” Is it possible to be any more evasive?

Every American should have access to quality health care without going bankrupt in the process. Check. I’m there. Several years ago my brother and his wife were financially wiped out in the process of saving the life of their new born baby. The emo ... view full comment

11/07/2009 - 2:46am EDT |

The GOP criticism here is reasonable (for a change!), but can apply to everything Congress does. The tendency for politicians to avoid making painful decisions is present and largely unavoidable in every democratic system, unless the populace as a whole chooses to act like grown-ups. And it is pretty rich for the GOP to make this argument, given that for the last generation they have been the party of fiscal irresponsibility, pushing tax cuts without a corresponding cut in spending (although they love to talk about spending cuts, they have not made them when in position to do so).

11/07/2009 - 7:03am EDT |

The idea that a larger role for Government in healthcare can reduce overall costs flies in the face of the only realistic data we have, which is that documenting the near bankruptcy of the government health programs already operating, Medicare and Medicaid. It's an extremely tough sell that the future will be fundamentally different.

lobosven makes a good point about the use of weasle words by Cohn. I would add the hilarious "proof" of Massachusetts "looking seriously", as opposed to actually doing something about, the spiraling costs that have put their plan in jeopardy.

get the magazine

Intellectual rigor. Honest reporting. Influential analysis. Don't miss another issue of the magazine considered "required reading" by the world's top decision-makers. Subscribe today.

Get our newsletters

Get Our Feed