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Single-payer health care would cost a small fraction compared to Obama's trillion-$$ plan [View All]

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brentspeak Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-27-09 11:01 AM
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Single-payer health care would cost a small fraction compared to Obama's trillion-$$ plan
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Edited on Wed May-27-09 11:05 AM by brentspeak
According to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/05/26/AR2009052602909_pf.html">this article in the Washington Post, even Democrats are pushing for a national sales tax in a desperate bid to stave off fiscal disaster fueled in part by Obama's trillion-dollar expansion of health care coverage. But this could be averted completely simply by switching to a single-payer health care system:

http://www.pnhp.org/facts/singlepayer_faq.php#subsidies

Won’t this raise my taxes?

Currently, about 60% of our health care system is financed by public money: federal and state taxes, property taxes and tax subsidies. These funds pay for Medicare, Medicaid, the VA, coverage for public employees (including police and teachers), elected officials, military personnel, etc. There are also hefty tax subsidies to employers to help pay for their employees’ health insurance. About 20% of health care is financed by all of us individually through out-of-pocket payments, such as co-pays, deductibles, the uninsured paying directly for care, people paying privately for premiums, etc. Private employers only pay 21% of health care costs. In all, it is a very “regressive” way to finance health care, in that the poor pay a much higher percentage of their income for health care than higher income individuals do.

A universal public system would be financed in the following way: The public funds already funneled to Medicare and Medicaid would be retained. The difference, or the gap between current public funding and what we would need for a universal health care system, would be financed by a payroll tax on employers (about 7%) and an income tax on individuals (about 2%). The payroll tax would replace all other employer expenses for employees’ health care, which would be eliminated. The income tax would take the place of all current insurance premiums, co-pays, deductibles, and other out-of-pocket payments. For the vast majority of people, a 2% income tax is less than what they now pay for insurance premiums and out-of-pocket payments such as co-pays and deductibles, particularly if a family member has a serious illness. It is also a fair and sustainable contribution.

Currently, 47 million people have no insurance and hundreds of thousands of people with insurance are bankrupted when they have an accident or illness. Employers who currently offer no health insurance would pay more, but those who currently offer coverage would, on average, pay less. For most large employers, a payroll tax in the 7% range would mean they would pay slightly less than they currently do (about 8.5%). No employer, moreover, would gain a competitive advantage because he had scrimped on employee health benefits. And health insurance would disappear from the bargaining table between employers and employees.

Of course, the biggest change would be that everyone would have the same comprehensive health coverage, including all medical, hospital, eye care, dental care, long-term care, and mental health services. Currently, many people and businesses are paying huge premiums for insurance so full of gaps like co-payments, deductibles and uncovered services that it would be almost worthless if they were to have a serious illness.


As opposed to Obama's trillion-dollar health coverage plan, the single-payer system actually pays for itself and provides better quality health care than any piece-meal national health insurance program.
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