Healthcare in the United States

Dean Baker discussing healthcare costs in the United States. Not something we have not heard before. In this case, Dean is adding a lot more detail to explain the issues. The PPACA is also known as the ACA. It is most commonly known as Obamacare. That is so as to assign blame for any shortcomings of the plan.

It does have shortcomings. However, compared to what was in place before, Obamacare is far better. It is just a step in the right direction.

Why Is Healthcare Expensive?

With the government shutdown largely over the future of Obamacare, it is a good time to say a bit about the ridiculous cost of healthcare in the United States. While Republicans blame high healthcare costs on Obamacare, as with most of the things they say, it has nothing to do with reality.

In fact, healthcare costs were rising far more rapidly before Obamacare came to be in 2010. In the decade before Obamacare passed, healthcare costs increased 4.0 percentage points as a share of GDP, the equivalent of more than $1.2 trillion in today’s economy. 

By contrast, in the 15 years since its passage, healthcare costs have increased by just 1.4 percentage points of GDP. If healthcare costs had continued to rise at the pre-Obamacare rate, we would be spending another $1.4 trillion a year, $11,000 per household, on healthcare. 

Obamacare was not the only factor in slowing healthcare cost growth, but it surely contributed to it. In any case, there is zero doubt. If healthcare cost growth had increased after 2010, Obamacare would be blamed. Given the reality, Republicans have their directions wrong;

Obamacare slowed, not raised, the rate of healthcare cost growth.

The Costly Trinity: Drugs, Insurance, and Doctors

The reason we pay more for healthcare than everyone else is not a mystery. We pay twice as much for everything, and we have an enormously wasteful private insurance system.

This is a case where it really is the fault of the government that drugs are expensive. We grant drug companies patent monopolies. These monopolies allow pharmaceutical companies to sell drugs for thousands or tens of thousands of dollars, when they would likely be available for tens or hundreds of dollars if they sold in a free market without these government-granted monopolies.  

We can triple this sum and make all findings a fully open source. New drugs can then be produced as generics the day they are approved. This would both make drugs cheap and also eliminate most of the motivation for corruption in the pharmaceutical industry. 

Drug companies have a huge incentive to lie about the safety and effectiveness of their drugs when they can sell a prescription for $3,000 that costs them $30 to manufacture and distribute. They would have much less incentive to push false stories that jeopardize people’s health if the drug was selling for $50 or $60 per prescription.

Some of us had hopes that RFK Jr., with his complaints about corruption in the pharmaceutical industry, would look to alter the system of patent monopoly financed research, which is the obvious source of this corruption. Instead, he has pushed an incoherent agenda, attacking Tylenol and generally cheap vaccines, that have a proven track record for safety and effectiveness. 

Anyhow, when it comes to lowering the cost for drugs we should not expect much from the Trump administration. We might get convoluted rhetoric about lowering prices 700, 800, or even 1,500 percent, but we will not get lower drug prices. 

Our bloated private insurance system is another source of massive waste in healthcare. We will pay more than $350 billion this year for the administrative costs of private health insurance. This is more than 25 percent of what they pay out to providers. By contrast, the administrative costs of Medicare are just over 1.0 percent of what it pays out to providers.

There are a number of reasons for these differences, but an obvious one is that the insurers pay their top executives tens of millions a year. The top administrators in Medicare get a bit over $200,000 a year. If someone is looking for waste, the excessive pay of insurance company executives is a good place to start. (Where’s Elon’s chainsaw when we need it?)

It is also important to recognize that ridiculous prices for drugs and medical equipment create a need for insurers that would not otherwise exist. If a drug company is charging $100,000 for a year’s treatment with a cancer drug, it does make sense to make sure that this drug will actually be more effective than drugs that might cost a tenth or a hundredth as much. 

However, if the drug were sold in a free market, and cost a few hundred dollars, there would be little reason to second guess the doctor who originally prescribed the drug. The same story applies to scans or the use of other medical equipment. The scrutiny that insurers impose on many drugs and procedures is largely the result of the high prices in the United States.

The last part of the story of bloated healthcare costs is the excessive compensation of doctors. We pay our doctors roughly twice as much as doctors in other wealthy countries. (This is much more a story with specialists than family practitioners.) Getting doctors’ pay down to something close to what they receive in Germany and Canada could save around $100 billion a year.

Reducing the Cost of Healthcare Means Taking Money from the Big Political Donors

The ways to reduce the cost of healthcare in the United States are not a secret, but they would involve a huge hit to the major donors to Republican politicians and also many Democratic politicians. That is why the issues are not major topics in political debates and usually are not even raised in major media outlets, like the New York Times or National Public Radio. 

Pointing out that drugs are expensive because of patent monopolies, or that we throw hundreds of billions a year in the garbage to keep the insurance system operating, is not popular among people with money. Therefore, the best we seem able to do at the moment is something like Obamacare. That is unfortunate, but there should be no confusion. Obamacare was a huge step forward in extending coverage and containing costs, and Republicans are lying when they try to claim the opposite.