A_Princess'_Daddy
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 5, 2010
- Messages
- 2,394
It's definitely a complicated situation. But to me, that makes it all the more frustrating that we have put so much effort into a program that doesn't even address ANY of the reasons the costs are spiraling out of control. Back when you & I were born, it wasn't unusual for a blue collar family to send the mother into the hospital for childbirth followed by a full week stay. And at the end of the week, the family would write a check for the entire bill. That's something the average family couldn't possibly afford today. Why is it SO much more? And why haven't we done anything to address THAT as opposed to trying to force more people into what is already a broken system?
You are correct, and the economist in me wants to tear my hair out because the problem is simply one of numbers, and several different types of numbers to boot. It's a similar problem with the spiraling cost of higher education (although a different set of numbers that are compounding).
The most significant issue is Medicare, which does not collect enough revenue, but is the single largest payor for most, if not all, hospitals. Falling birth rates means that not enough people are added to the revenue collection side, while the aging population grows dramatically and places greater demands on the shrinking revenue. Nobody wants to raise the FICA rate (well, that's not entirely true, but it's not a vote most politicians have the stomach for), so we have a looming problem. We can grow the tax base, i.e. immigration, but that's another third rail.
Another, underexplored issue, is one of basic math. The cost of health care increases faster than household income, and it does so for two reasons. The first is that a major expense in health care is salaries, not only of the people working in direct medical care but also the salaries of those who make the equipment that gets used, etc. And those people, like all people, expect their incomes to increase. So if the only cost of health care was salaries, and the entire profession got the same COLA that the general population receives, right there we have a problem because a 2% salary increase on a surgeon's $300,000 salary is $6,000 per year, while a 2% salary increase on a $40,000 person's salary is $800. So the gap will grow and compound each year, thereby increasing the gap every year by a bit more. The second issue is that there are other costs, as well, and those are spiraling out of control far beyond those of the salary pool. So if 33% of the cost of health care is "fixed costs," i.e. equipment, maintenance, utilities, etc., and those are increasing by 5% per year, those will also swamp the budget but still have to be paid by those who received a 2% salary increase (unless more revenue, i.e. taxes, is collected and pooled, which is obviously still being paid by somebody, but in pooling there are better areas of leverage to use). So every year the delta grows, and it becomes an intractable problem, all because of compounding's unblinking eye.
The solution comes down to one of the most basic rules of game theory, but the issue is that if we compel behavior, it's heavy handed, but if we incentivize behavior, which is the premise behind encouraging young, low-utilizers into the risk pool, then people, being allowed to act independently, will not consider the collective but rather act in their own self-interest. I do disagree with your belief that the fix is worse than the problem, but I also agree that the law could be improved. The challenge is that the polarization has led to entrenchment, as anything less than the total repeal of the law is anathema to a small segment of the Congress but one that can effectively stop progress. The best solution is for all to come to the middle, but that can only if those of us at both poles stop clamoring for total victory.
ETA: Lest it come off as partisan, my premise is that ALL sides need to come together to compromise and work things out if we are to improve things.