Health Insurance Again and This Time with Krugman

If one were to attack real-spending as an issue to our economy and wish to lower spending, one of the places to look is commercial healthcare insurance. If I were the richest jumping -jack in the world, I would target Medicare Advantage which is paid extra to provide fundamental healthcare and up codes the service it provides to its captive customers.

A bit of Paul Krugman-freed for you today. Freed from the NYT, he seems to be on fire too. This is an older post. Well, at least five days older than the day first shown. Although I do not believe I could steal Paul’s thunder, I think it is impolite to repost the same day it first appeared. So, I waited.

A topic I know a smidgen about having talked about it since I arrived at Angry Bear. I will present it, in entirety except for one picture. Some of the graphs on healthcare insurance and where it derives look familiar. Looked and could not find my version.

Read on . . .

To say the obvious, murder is bad, and so are murderers. Neither should be celebrated.

But saying that Thompson didn’t deserve his fate shouldn’t require pretending that health insurers play a generally productive role in our society. For the most part, they don’t.

Let me offer a somewhat, but only somewhat, caricatured view of U.S. health care:

It’s a system in which taxpayers bear the cost of major medical care, but this taxpayer money flows through private companies that take a cut, spend a lot on administration, and do their best to deny care to people who need it.

This (almost) reality may not be obvious if you simply look at where people get health insurance. A majority of Americans are covered by private insurers, either via employer-sponsored plans or, a smaller tranche, by individual policies, mostly purchased via Affordable Care Act exchanges:

But medical expenses vary greatly with age, and older Americans are covered by Medicare; many younger Americans with serious health problems are covered by Medicaid. So private insurers pay a surprisingly low share of expenses:

So we really have a system in which taxpayers’ foot the bill for around 80 percent of health insurance. Yet much of that money flows through private insurance companies. In fact, a majority of Medicare recipients now have Medicare Advantage plans, which means that even Medicare passes through the private insurance industry:

In short, I wasn’t exaggerating all that much by saying that we have a system in which taxpayers pay for health care, but the money is paid out through the insurance industry, which skims off a substantial part along the way.

So you could make the case that at this point private health insurance is, in large part, a parasitical racket. At which point at least some readers will ask me why I didn’t back Bernie Sanders in his call for single-payer, Medicare for all.

The answer is that this call was and remains politically unrealistic.

The big problem isn’t the political power of the insurance industry, although that’s nothing to sneeze at (and good luck getting your medical bills fully paid if you catch pneumonia.) The more important problem is that most Americans with employer-sponsored health insurance are happy with their coverage:

True, they’re not as happy as Americans covered by Medicare, and become considerably less happy if and when their health deteriorates and they need to make greater use of their insurance:

But still, anyone proposing a radical reform like Medicare for all is in effect saying to large numbers of voters,

“We’re going to take away the insurance you like, that you believe works for you, and replace it with something different. It will be better! Trust us!”

That’s a very difficult pitch to make. In a way, it’s what Bill Clinton tried in 1993 — and he failed badly. If Harry Truman had managed to add health insurance to Social Security in 1947, Americans would take single-payer for granted and be furious if anyone proposed privatizing health insurance. But we are where we are; Obamacare was designed to expand coverage while doing as little as possible to disrupt existing health arrangements — and as some older readers may remember, it barely made it through Congress even so.

So no, let’s not murder health company executives and lionize their killers. But let’s also not pretend that their industry serves society.