Straight Platform Politics
Information of Interest-
The Free Market And Health Care – Part 3
Posted on October 23rd, 2009 Webmaster No comments
“What Is the Free-Market Approach to Health Care Reform?” This is an article published on The CATO Institute on Health Care Reform. http://healthcare.cato.org/ The article lists seven reforms; we have reviewed the first four and will now look at the last three. See Part 2Reform 5. “We also need to rethink medical licensing laws to encourage greater competition among providers.” Examining the history of enabling legislation in the health care system causes many people to conclude that much of the legislation was enacted to protect the profession and not the patient. See The Four-Party Health Care System series
Reform 6. “Congress should give Medicare enrollees a voucher, let them choose any health plan on the market, and let them keep the savings if they choose an economical plan. Medicare could even give larger vouchers to the poor and sick to ensure they could afford coverage.” This may encourage a healthier lifestyle in the elderly while improving competition among insurers.
Reform 7. “The expansion of ‘health status insurance’ would protect many of those with preexisting conditions.” (See the February 18, 2009 Policy Analysis by
John H. Cochrane on the topic of health status insurance at http://cato.org/ )There have been good health care reforms proposed by a number of people and organizations. Many of these reforms would not be costly. But, are Congress and the President listening?
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The Free Market And Health Care – Part 2
Posted on October 20th, 2009 Webmaster 1 comment
“What Is the Free-Market Approach to Health Care Reform?” is an article published by the Cato Institute. http://healthcare.cato.org/ The article lists seven reforms to our health care system that would improve health care access, quality, and cost.Cato Institute’s mission states that the organization promotes policies based on limited government, free markets, individual liberty, and peace. The Cato philosophy supports “a uniquely American solution, one that builds on free markets, competition, and choice.”
We will continue our look at each proposed reform. See Part 1
Reform 3. “Changing from employer to individual insurance requires changing the tax treatment of health insurance.” Employer-provided insurance gives the employed a significant tax advantage over the self-employed. The health insurance of the former is not taxable income while that of the latter is. This is not fair and must be changed. The article recommends that “[w]orkers should receive a standard deduction, a tax credit, or, better still, large Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) for the purchase of health insurance, regardless of whether they receive it through their jobs or purchase it on their own.”
Reform 4. “We need to increase competition among both insurers and health providers. People should be allowed to purchase health insurance across state lines.”
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The Free Market And Health Care – Part 1
Posted on October 14th, 2009 Webmaster 1 comment
The CATO Institute on Health Care Reform published the article “What Is the Free-Market Approach to Health Care Reform?” The article agrees that our health care system is in need of reform: “It costs too much. Too many people lack health insurance. And quality can be uneven.”“But a government takeover of the health care system, as proposed by the president and some in Congress, would be a step in the wrong direction. Instead, we should pursue a uniquely American solution, one that builds on free markets, competition, and choice.”
The proposed solution lists seven reforms. We will look at each.
Reform 1. “Let individuals control their health care dollars, and free them to choose from a wide variety of health care plans and providers.” This would entail dismantling the huge amount of government legislation (both state and federal) that has denied individuals access to certain insurance providers and vice versa.
Reform 2. “Move away from a health care system dominated by employer-provided health insurance.” As the article asserts, health insurance “should be personal and portable” and not controlled by governments or employers. Under our employer-based system, the true cost of health care is hidden from employees, employee choice of health care policies is limited, the self-employed are at a costly disadvantage, and if employees lose employment, they may become uninsured. See The Four-Party Health Care System series
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The Four-Party Health Care System – Part 5
Posted on October 13th, 2009 Webmaster No comments
“The Modern Health Care Maze: Development and Effects of the Four-Party System” was published in the Summer 2009 issue of The Independent Review. Authors Charles Kroncke and Ronald F. White conclude in their article: “Ultimately, the only way to reform our health care system successfully is to destroy the infrastructure that sustains the four-party system….” See Part 4Kroncke and White wisely ask what most people haven’t yet asked: “In hindsight, did it ever really make sense to set up a health care system whereby fourth-party corporate employers purchase health care insurance for their first-party employees from third-party corporations, which in turn pay second-party providers for health care products and services? Does any other industry insulate buyers from sellers in this way? Why does this arrangement make sense only for the health care industry? Why not for food, clothing, and shelter? Why not for homeowners, life, and auto insurance?”

“The current maze of health care policy wrought by years of accumulated enabling legislation has in effect disabled free-market mechanisms….Until we reduce government’s ability to surreptitiously distort the market forces that drive the health care industry, the juggernaut and other dysfunctional arrangements will continue to plague the system.”
Hopefully, more people will understand the importance of changing our health care system from an employer to a patient driven system which would treat individuals far more equally than what we have now. It’s imperative that we settle for nothing less.
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