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NAVIGATION PNHP RESOURCES
Posted on February 3, 2009

Jacob Hacker is a nice guy, but...

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Getting Health Reform Right: A Q&A With Jacob Hacker

RJ Eskow
The Huffington Post
February 2, 2009

Professor Hacker’s proposal, Health Care for America, is based on two simple principles: First, that both the employer-based private system and publicly-funded Medicare are essentially working for their members. Second, that every uninsured American (or legal resident) should be able to buy into a Medicare-like public program at affordable rates, with need-based subsidies.

The plan has been well-received across the center/left spectrum, even receiving a friendly review from Don McCanne, MD, a Senior Fellow with single-payer advocacy group Physicians for a National Health Program (PHNP).

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rj-eskow/getting-health-reform-rig_b_163270.html

And…

Getting Health Reform Right: According to Jacob Hacker

By DrSteveB
Daily Kos
February 3, 2009

There is a must read interview with Jacob Hacker, the re-inventor of the individual mandate bulding blocks plan for liberals (it originally came from center-right think tanks) which is the same core as Obama/Baucus/Daschle et al, summarized on HuffPo and in full at Richard Eskow’s the Sentinel Effect blog.

As Don McCanne and other Single Payers advocates have been pointing out:

Leaving the private insurers in place perpetuates the administrative waste of those insurers and the administrative burden on the providers. Intense regulatory oversight of the private insurers would be even more imperative since they would increase their efforts to game the system through surreptitious favorable selection and other clandestine market expediencies. The public program would likely concentrate lower-income individuals initially, risking a political transformation into a welfare program. Also his plan includes features of both an employer mandate and an individual mandate, each with its own policy problems, though he does ameliorate the impact to a certain extent with some of the other features of his plan. From a single payer perspective, it would be far better to totally cut the link between financing and coverage. A system of equitable tax funding of the entire risk pool is more efficient than a system of premiums linked to the individual.

nativist posts:

I read that post, and like this author, I think Mr. Hacker is incorrect as to the effectiveness of private healthcare.

I’m surprised Don Mcanne is supposed to be onboard with the features of Hacker’s proposals. Speaking broadly, yes it’s good to have Medicare or a close clone compete against trad insurers. Perhaps half a loaf is better than none in his view.

DrSteveB posts:

Don was being polite in Jan 2007… Don is always polite with our erstwhile incrementalist reformist friends

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2009/2/3/72018/39311/226/692345

Comment:

By Don McCanne, MD

My response, as follows, was posted on both blogs (edited to under 250 words for Huffington Post):

Jacob Hacker deserves our respect, even if wrong

DrSteveB is right. I was being polite. Jacob Hacker is a highly respected political scientist who supports social justice. I have greatly admired his work.

In his proposal he was looking for a political solution to satisfy those with good employer-sponsored plans who are uncomfortable with trading them in for a public plan that has not yet been precisely defined (since any proposed public plan must clear the hurdles in Congress). In so doing he compromised on policy, trading away many of the advantages of the single payer model.

Since I wrote the comments above, the public option described by Hacker has come under intensive attack by Enzi and his fellow Republicans, by AHIP, and by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. It has been singled out as the most important feature that the Democrats will have to trade away if they expect the Republican support and industry support that they will need.

At best, “universal” coverage will be FEHBP plans with unaffordable premiums. Obama understood that an individual mandate cannot work, though efforts are being made to require that. According to the Milliman Medical Index, an average working family is already paying $15,600 for health care. That’s average, so many are paying more. Using private plans with premiums indexed to the average costs of individuals and their families is an obsolete model of financing health care.

Health care costs are now so high that only an administratively efficient, equitably funded universal risk pool will work. It would automatically include everyone, with financing based on ability to pay. As a single payer, the program would be a single purchaser (monopsony), finally providing us with a mechanism that would ensure value in our health care purchasing.

(I’ll add here that a social insurance model using private plans would also “work,” but is a far more expensive model of reform that trades away administrative efficiency, equity and true universality. Perpetuating unfairness, waste, and leaving some out is not the definition of what works, in my book.)

Don McCanne