Health Care

Faulty Math in CBO Senate Healthcare Bill Analysis

Published October 08, 2009 @ 06:00AM PT

Bad Math

Well, the CBO definitely got one thing right in its financial analysis of the Senate Finance Committee’s health bill. In commenting on Kent Conrad’s nonprofit co-op idea, it wrote that they "seem unlikely to establish a significant medical presence in many areas of the country." I already shared my opinion on co-ops as destined-to-fail recycling attempts.

Other than that, though, here is their 10 year breakdown of the bill:

  • Cost: $829 billion
  • Benefit: $81 billion in reduced federal deficits
  • Coverage: Increase from 83% to 94% of Americans
  • Uninsured Reduction: 29 million
  • Missing: $200 billion in Medicare physician payment increases
  • Risk: 15% low-income subsidy cuts to abide by Obama’s budget-neutral failsafe mechanism

The SFC bill’s lower cost sent House Democrats scrambling to reduce HR 3200’s cost under the $900 billion limit set by the president, even though their plan would cover 8 million more people than the SFC’s. Part of their strategy may be to move 7 million low-income individuals onto Medicaid instead of providing subsidies for private insurance.

Which brings me to my point. They realized something most of us haven’t. Much of the budgeting exercise has been based on faulty math because the largest cost factor is an unknown – private insurance costs. Higher education provides a useful, though painfully similar, example.

Let’s say you have kids going off to college. You have promised, in writing, to subsidize each of them above a certain dollar amount that they should have saved up, and they in turn have agreed that college is mandatory. The goal, of course, is for them to get a high quality education for a reasonable cost. And you are acutely aware that any money spent on your kids’ education is at the expense of your retirement fund.

Which option would you choose:

a) Turn over your wallet with few strings attached and leave all decision-making power to your kid and the colleges, without limiting total college-of-choice costs; or

b) Allow your kid a wide range of possible college options while retaining final decision-making authority over college costs you will pay?

Whenever the universal healthcare tab has been deemed too high, the favorite “remedies” until now seem to revolve around dumping the public option and lowering subsidies, while keeping coverage mandates and consumer protections.

Here is the problem with that:

The top 10 for-profit insurers made $12.9 billion in profits in 2007. That’s despite spending 454% more than government-run Medicare on administrative bureaucracy. Now, add millions of new members to their rolls, with no premium caps and guaranteed government premium subsidies. It will be a profit “bonanza”, according to Robert Laszewsi, a 20 year insurance executive. We don’t need our hands tied behind our backs while private insurers steal our wallets.

“Government-run” healthcare has been proven world-wide to reduce costs through administrative efficiencies and payment negotiating clout. For example, we could save $51 billion annually in administrative costs by switching to a mixed private/public healthcare system like Switzerland’s. That’s half the annual cost of healthcare reform! Where’s the savings? Their private insurance is all truly non-profit (there’s little “surplus” motive) and the public part is a government-controlled prescription pricing program.

We don’t have the equivalent of Swiss non-profits. However, we do have a public option in the HELP bill and HR 3200 that can provide competition to wring some of that $12.9 billion waste from our healthcare. I’m not sure the CBO can do that kind of math.

Editor's Note: Originally I was going to introduce myself to everyone today. Given the news cycle, however, I thought it better to update you on the CBO release. The Meet the Editor post will post Friday, I promise.

Photo Jeremy Castillo // CC BY 2.0

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Comments (9)

  1. Martin Bring

    When President Obama addressed Congress on health insurance reform, he said he wasn't the first president to try to reform health care but he was determined to be the last.

    The fact of the matter is that while Republicans are thankfully irrelevant to the reform effort, the Democrat's plans for reform are so underwhelming and deficient by international standards that the issue of health insurance reform will remain unresolved through Obama's presidency.

     


    Posted by Martin Bring on 10/08/2009 @ 11:57AM PT

  2. Jason Jaytheman

    I don't say I have the answers, but why does Baucus have so many big pharma donors?

    http://www.opensecrets.org/politicians/summary.php?type=C&cid=N00004643&newMem=N&cycle=2010 

    especially in re-election years...

    Posted by Jason Jaytheman on 10/08/2009 @ 04:59PM PT

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    • 1 person likes this comment.   Like
  3. Reply to thread
  4. M Arnest

    Where is the math that says, "Obama has generated the largest deficit in history 1.4 trillion dollars, and that's without the health care price tag of 900 billion over 10 years. This took him 9 months?"By the way this is a conservative projection by the CBO, there are much higher projections.

    I don't like the fact that the corporations make so much money, but they are privately owned.  The government should tax them (windfall profit tax) if they make so much.  That would help some. Who are we trying to kid? If we raise money by taxing them, the costs get passed onto us as an indirect tax.

    If the companies are that inefficient, 454% on admin costs, oh wait, the article doesn't say if this is a bigger entity or not. If apples to apples, they deserve to fail.  Great more layoffs.

    As for driving down costs, not here in the good old USA. Massachusetts spent 630 million in 2007 and 1.3 billion this year on their government run health care.  Government took over--cost doubled in 2 years!  I know this to be a direct fact with no conjecture or assumption.  Worried?  Canada is hinting at the same problem.

    Get rid of the health care mandates, public options etc. and higher costs congress.  Just allow interstate trade, tort reform and start programs to address causes.  No band aids please. 

    Congress address the rights of the uninsurable and don't use our young to pay for the old, you already had you're chance to show us how the government would take charge and demonstrated to all you didn't have the volition to do it right! (Social Security to pay for Vietnam).

    Lets cut congressional pay and have our politicians work as volunteers to help this nation.  There isn't any magic bullet and the money is going away.  The treasury can't overprint and the dollar is loosing major ground.  Irresponsibility makes waves in the pond.  this will be a storm.

    Posted by M Arnest on 10/08/2009 @ 06:49PM PT

  5. Martin Bring

    Mike,

    You forgot to say we should subject health insurance companies to the antitrust law from which they are currently exempt.

    Allow the importation of prescription drugs.

    Reform the patent system. It's just another government subsidy.

    Do away with the Federal Reserve System.

    Do away with the IRS.

    Campaign Reform: Do away with the legal concept of 'corporate personhood' and eliminate campaign contributions by legal persons. (notably, corporations and labor unions)

     

     

    Posted by Martin Bring on 10/10/2009 @ 10:27AM PT

  6. M Arnest

    Yes Martin, if there are not windfalls, go for anti trust suits if they can be prosecuted.  I agree about the drugs overseas, research and patents should not claim all the profits for drug development the way they do.  Tort should take care of some of this if people weren't allowed to sue for every potential drug problem.

    I don't know about the IRS LOL.  They have been around since 1862, but we could go to a stronger currency and rid ourselves of the reserve by using gold.

    You can try, but I don't foresee unseating the ACLU's grip on our politicians.  They are big contributors to our party.

    The unions are killing us, they killed the auto industry and I feel like the should has been sold to them by many politicians.

    Posted by M Arnest on 10/10/2009 @ 12:21PM PT

  7. Martin Bring

    Right now I'm more concerned about the AHIP, the AMA, and PhRMA...

    Business associations whose interests in health care reform are not in the public interest.

    Posted by Martin Bring on 10/10/2009 @ 06:44PM PT

  8. Reply to thread
  9. kris bucker

    1+1=3 is a good picture for talking about healthcare. I think its their age. OLD people cannot make rational decision. They are on a payroll that prevents them from thinking logically.

    Two Voices | Two Guys

    Posted by kris bucker on 10/10/2009 @ 08:21PM PT

  10. James Turner

    We do need a change to address health care, and I do agree with the money problems.  I am concerned as a citizen.  The reserve can't keep printing money.  Big oil countries are going to dump our dollar for the euro.  Major inflation could follow as people try to dump their dollars.

    Finally, I am getting an idea about this issue.  We will spend almost a trillion to save 89 billion?  What is up with that math?

    Health care was brought up because medicare is a fiasco.  How will we pay for it?

    I don't like the fact that younger citizens have to pay a little more than $100 a month.  That is a tax!  The president said no taxes!

    Posted by James Turner on 10/11/2009 @ 06:15AM PT

  11. M Arnest

    Charles,

    You are asking our elected congress to use their heads.  They are just as "Out-of-Touch" as the last congress.  They can't save a dollar or use sense.

    Why not try the things that are cheaper to fix health care?  I thought Bush was ignorant, but Obama is more so.  He is surrounded by people who can't understand fiscal responsibility.

    Fix health care congress, don't get us involved in another mess like Medicare and Social Security!  Most Americans have common sense, why doesn't our congress apply this "new" strategy, common sense?

    We need educated brains to solve this mess, not congressmen who are so political.

     

    Posted by M Arnest on 10/26/2009 @ 03:25AM PT

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Gillian Hubble

Gillian Hubble is owner of Actively Fused, a consulting and healthcare advocacy firm, and a partner in KDG, a business development firm.

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