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Beamer
I hope this has some effect.



QUOTE
REVIEW & OUTLOOK
NOVEMBER 1, 2009, 11:23 P.M. ET.
The Worst Bill Ever

Epic new spending and taxes, pricier insurance, rationed care, dishonest accounting: The Pelosi health bill has it all

Speaker Nancy Pelosi has reportedly told fellow Democrats that she's prepared to lose seats in 2010 if that's what it takes to pass ObamaCare, and little wonder. The health bill she unwrapped last Thursday, which President Obama hailed as a "critical milestone," may well be the worst piece of post-New Deal legislation ever introduced.

In a rational political world, this 1,990-page runaway train would have been derailed months ago. With spending and debt already at record peacetime levels, the bill creates a new and probably unrepealable middle-class entitlement that is designed to expand over time. Taxes will need to rise precipitously, even as ObamaCare so dramatically expands government control of health care that eventually all medicine will be rationed via politics.

Yet at this point, Democrats have dumped any pretense of genuine bipartisan "reform" and moved into the realm of pure power politics as they race against the unpopularity of their own agenda. The goal is to ram through whatever income-redistribution scheme they can claim to be "universal coverage." The result will be destructive on every level—for the health-care system, for the country's fiscal condition, and ultimately for American freedom and prosperity.


•The spending surge. The Congressional Budget Office figures the House program will cost $1.055 trillion over a decade, which while far above the $829 billion net cost that Mrs. Pelosi fed to credulous reporters is still a low-ball estimate. Most of the money goes into government-run "exchanges" where people earning between 150% and 400% of the poverty level—that is, up to about $96,000 for a family of four in 2016—could buy coverage at heavily subsidized rates, tied to income. The government would pay for 93% of insurance costs for a family making $42,000, 72% for another making $78,000, and so forth.

At least at first, these benefits would be offered only to those whose employers don't provide insurance or work for small businesses with 100 or fewer workers. The taxpayer costs would be far higher if not for this "firewall"—which is sure to cave in when people see the deal their neighbors are getting on "free" health care. Mrs. Pelosi knows this, like everyone else in Washington.

Even so, the House disguises hundreds of billions of dollars in additional costs with budget gimmicks. It "pays for" about six years of program with a decade of revenue, with the heaviest costs concentrated in the second five years. The House also pretends Medicare payments to doctors will be cut by 21.5% next year and deeper after that, "saving" about $250 billion. ObamaCare will be lucky to cost under $2 trillion over 10 years; it will grow more after that.

• Expanding Medicaid, gutting private Medicare. All this is particularly reckless given the unfunded liabilities of Medicare—now north of $37 trillion over 75 years. Mrs. Pelosi wants to steal $426 billion from future Medicare spending to "pay for" universal coverage. While Medicare's price controls on doctors and hospitals are certain to be tightened, the only cut that is a sure thing in practice is gutting Medicare Advantage to the tune of $170 billion. Democrats loathe this program because it gives one of out five seniors private insurance options.

As for Medicaid, the House will expand eligibility to everyone below 150% of the poverty level, meaning that some 15 million new people will be added to the rolls as private insurance gets crowded out at a cost of $425 billion. A decade from now more than a quarter of the population will be on a program originally intended for poor women, children and the disabled.

Even though the House will assume 91% of the "matching rate" for this joint state-federal program—up from today's 57%—governors would still be forced to take on $34 billion in new burdens when budgets from Albany to Sacramento are in fiscal collapse. Washington's budget will collapse too, if anything like the House bill passes.

• European levels of taxation. All told, the House favors $572 billion in new taxes, mostly by imposing a 5.4-percentage-point "surcharge" on joint filers earning over $1 million, $500,000 for singles. This tax will raise the top marginal rate to 45% in 2011 from 39.6% when the Bush tax cuts expire—not counting state income taxes and the phase-out of certain deductions and exemptions. The burden will mostly fall on the small businesses that have organized as Subchapter S or limited liability corporations, since the truly wealthy won't have any difficulty sheltering their incomes.

This surtax could hit ever more earners because, like the alternative minimum tax, it isn't indexed for inflation. Yet it still won't be nearly enough. Even if Congress had confiscated 100% of the taxable income of people earning over $500,000 in the boom year of 2006, it would have only raised $1.3 trillion. When Democrats end up soaking the middle class, perhaps via the European-style value-added tax that Mrs. Pelosi has endorsed, they'll claim the deficits that they created made them do it.

Under another new tax, businesses would have to surrender 8% of their payroll to government if they don't offer insurance or pay at least 72.5% of their workers' premiums, which eat into wages. Such "play or pay" taxes always become "pay or pay" and will rise over time, with severe consequences for hiring, job creation and ultimately growth. While the U.S. already has one of the highest corporate income tax rates in the world, Democrats are on the way to creating a high structural unemployment rate, much as Europe has done by expanding its welfare states.

Meanwhile, a tax equal to 2.5% of adjusted gross income will also be imposed on some 18 million people who CBO expects still won't buy insurance in 2019. Democrats could make this penalty even higher, but that is politically unacceptable, or they could make the subsidies even higher, but that would expose the (already ludicrous) illusion that ObamaCare will reduce the deficit.

• The insurance takeover. A new "health choices commissioner" will decide what counts as "essential benefits," which all insurers will have to offer as first-dollar coverage. Private insurers will also be told how much they are allowed to charge even as they will have to offer coverage at virtually the same price to anyone who applies, regardless of health status or medical history.

The cost of insurance, naturally, will skyrocket. The insurer WellPoint estimates based on its own market data that some premiums in the individual market will triple under these new burdens. The same is likely to prove true for the employer-sponsored plans that provide private coverage to about 177 million people today. Over time, the new mandates will apply to all contracts, including for the large businesses currently given a safe harbor from bureaucratic tampering under a 1974 law called Erisa.

The political incentive will always be for government to expand benefits and reduce cost-sharing, trampling any chance of giving individuals financial incentives to economize on care. Essentially, all insurers will become government contractors, in the business of fulfilling political demands: There will be no such thing as "private" health insurance.

***
All of this is intentional, even if it isn't explicitly acknowledged. The overriding liberal ambition is to finish the work began decades ago as the Great Society of converting health care into a government responsibility. Mr. Obama's own Medicare actuaries estimate that the federal share of U.S. health dollars will quickly climb beyond 60% from 46% today. One reason Mrs. Pelosi has fought so ferociously against her own Blue Dog colleagues to include at least a scaled-back "public option" entitlement program is so that the architecture is in place for future Congresses to expand this share even further.

As Congress's balance sheet drowns in trillions of dollars in new obligations, the political system will have no choice but to start making cost-minded decisions about which treatments patients are allowed to receive. Democrats can't regulate their way out of the reality that we live in a world of finite resources and infinite wants. Once health care is nationalized, or mostly nationalized, medical rationing is inevitable—especially for the innovative high-cost technologies and drugs that are the future of medicine.

Mr. Obama rode into office on a wave of "change," but we doubt most voters realized that the change Democrats had in mind was making health care even more expensive and rigid than the status quo. Critics will say we are exaggerating, but we believe it is no stretch to say that Mrs. Pelosi's handiwork ranks with the Smoot-Hawley tariff and FDR's National Industrial Recovery Act as among the worst bills Congress has ever seriously contemplated.



http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142405...3751140690.html
graham4anything
lies

maynard was right.
Arneoker
Yes, the ultrarich elties are likely to be foursquare against this bill or any bill out of Congress aimed at helping most folks and that tend to help those at the bottom more than those at the top.

In other news the Sun rose today...
graham4anything
beamer has proven by her ad-hominem attack on me on the other thread saying "get a job to get insurance" even though I have insurance

shows the haters want all small business, and all sole-proprietors to go to hell. they are unimportant

it is obvious, in her world, only major large corporations are of importance
the rest be dammed
(or go to the major big corp. walmart at 2 bucks an hour with NO benefits. as the unions are not allowed.

I think the big corps ceo's and the rich should f--k themselves.
jimiray
Actually Graham .... and I hate to say it because of the way I have always felt about Wal-Mart but they actually do have benefits. I have a sister who works for Wal-Mart and she has health insurance (even dental) through Wal-Mart. She makes pretty good money working there too...... but she's been with them for a long time now. Store managers do really good too. They get a profit share every year if they run the store effectively enough to make a profit.
ap215
Pelosi says she's prepared to lose seats well i hope she takes the 53 Blue Dog coalition members with her cause they've been terrible.
xyzse
I can't fully attack Wal-mart either. They do crowd out other businesses. They create jobs, but it is basically transformed from others to Wal-Mart jobs. Their practices towards work environment in other countries though is questionable at best, but they do provide health care for their workers.

As for the Health Care bill, I agree that it isn't satisfactory. It doesn't go far enough in my view and still hurts the consumers more than the Insurers.

So what else do I want to add to it?

1 - I do want Universal Health Care.
2 - Change Drug Advertising Laws to how it was back then. It has to be more technical, give ALL side effects not just the major ones, and has to mention clinical trials and how it is comparatively to what is already out there.
3 - Have Doctors actually show how much a check-up, and every procedure costs before showing how much insurance covers. People should see how much a Doctor charges before they do a co-pay. It would allow more competative pricing.

It is not only insurance companies that are the problem. It is everyone really.

Big Pharma directly advertises to consumers who then influence the Doctor's decisions. Which then a lot of the time forces doctors to prescribe medicine that would most likely cause more harm than good. This also happens with the threat of lawsuits from missed tests that also can cause more harm than good. Insurance companies also drop people who have been paying for years and years as soon as they finally need it(I just don't think it fair). Then those who are ininsured can not get serviced until it is catastrophic and at the ER, which is even more expensive, all of which ends up being paid for by everyone else by increased costs.

I do have a problem with the bill as it stands as it does not put enough safeguards for the consumers and small businesses who will have to buy insurance, while keeping costs low.

See, I don't mind a raise in taxes as long as it provides me benefits. Right now, taxes mostly benefit the ones up top and bigger businesses, I don't see as much focus on education, and much needed services for building and repairing roads and so forth. Actually, that isn't true, it has been true till this Administration. There has been more spending towards domestic priorities which has been lacking from the prior Admin.

Unfortunately, if this is the best they can do, it is just not good enough. However, I can't really blame them either as the Republicans have just not been helpful at all. Many of them did not even bother trying to come up with ideas or different options but just refused to be helpful and at worst obstructionists.

I still see that bill as benefitting insurers and the companies more than the tax payers. I wish to be proved wrong.
bigtom
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