But you've done just that. You claimed they used trickery or gimmickry to misrepresent the effect of the healthcare bill. When I call you on it, you just change the subject.
Let's just call it questionable then, like their worst-case scenario last February of unemployment peaking at 8.5% under the stimulus.
Again, you're being evasive. Where does the CBO make the assumption that people will choose a $3600 premium over a $750 penalty?
When they claim the mandates will cause the ranks of the insured top go from 83% to 94% (bottom of page 8).
FWIW, I don't think those numbers reflect a choice that many people would face. Even if they did, just comparing $750 and $3600 isn't the whole story. The fine doesn't get you insurance, so the comparison would be $750 plus the pay-as-you-go costs of healthcare compared to $3600 plus any co-pays you might incur. (Last I checked, the reform bill would limit those co-pays, while the sky's the limit on the pay-as-you-go approach.)
No, the fine doesn't get you health care. What does get you health care is paying for one month of health insurance coverage, even after you get sick.
Suppose I decide to not buy health insurance, which I can get for $300/month (a low estimnate actually), and simply pay the $750 tax penalty instead. I can budget $100 for an annual checkup, so my maximum out-of-pocket expense is $850, quite a deal compared to $3,600. Let's suppose I have my annual checkup in June, and the doctor discovers I have a condition requiring surgery, which will cost $7,500. Now all I need to do is sign up for the insurance, pay my $300, and get my surgery. After my surgery I can simply cancel my coverage. And guess what? The $750 tax penalty is pro-rated, so my tax penalty goes down to $687.50, reflecting the one month I purchased health insurance. My total expenses for the year are $987.50, I'm still much better off than if I had paid the $3,600 for the entire years worth of insurance.
This is a rational choice Joe. To anyone who can do 3rd grade math it would be irrational to buy a years worth on insurance, because I would have spent an extra $2,612.50 for no benefit to me at all.
Do you see the problem here? Assuming people are rational, this will cause premiums to skyrocket because insurance companies can't survive selling a $7,500 operation for $300.
I agree.
A true single payer system makes a lot more sense than health insurance reform. I've said that many times.
It makes more sense than the idiocy coming from Congress, but I hardly think single payer is the way to go. If we go to single payer, to whom do you turn if you're unhappy with the only provider you have? What incentive is there to keep costs down, to innovate, to keep the bureaucracy in check?
However, I find your implied support here for the UHC systems of other countries to be disingenuous.
It's not disingenuous at all. While I don't support single-payer, I do support the following:
1. Tax health insurance benefits offered by employers. The goal is to untie health insurance from employment, which in a company of 100 people means you have 100 people shopping around for health insurance instead of one person buying ot for 99 others. This will help spurn actual competition amongst insurance providers. A side benefit of this is employers would be gretly pressured to increase employee pay to make up for the loss of benefit.
2. Get the states out of the insurance regulation business. Let the Federal government be the sole regulator of health insurance, far easier to comply with one national standard rather than 50, which will cut down on overhead costs and thus allow for lower premiums. There won't be any constitutional issues because...
3. Insurance companies are then allowed to sell insurance across state lines - interstate commerce! Again, this increases competition because instead of having only a few (in some states as few as 2) insurance companies to choose from the consumer now has dozens. All of which have to offer plans meeting the minimum standards set by the Federal government.
4. While the Federal government won't set the price of any insurance plan, they will require that everyone buying that particular plan pay the same premium as everyone else buying that particular plan. Joe won't be paying $500/month while Harry pays just $250.
5. Insurance companies won't be able to deny coverage for any reason, including pre-existing conditions. This will be made possible because the penalty for not buying health insurance will be set slightly higher than the national average for a plan meeting the minimum requirements. No financial incentives to game the system as I described above.
6. Of course, not everyone will be able to afford insurance. So the Federal government will subsidize your premium on a sliding scale according to income. The poor get nearly 100% subsidized, the rich get no subsidy at all. Everyone else gets a subsidy somewhere in between those extremes.
7. With all the above in place, there would no longer be a need for Medicaid, S-CHIP, and the myriad other federal, state, and local health care initiatives offered nationwide. Overnight, billions and billions of dollars in unnecessary administrative costs are excised from budgets at all levels of government. The entire health care system just got radically more efficient, with a much higher percentage of health care dollars going towards patient care rather than to administering thousands of pages of complex and overlapping rules and regulations.
This is actually very similar to what many UHC countries already have today. In fact, it's a more common model than the single-payer systems in Canada and the UK and one in which the United States already has the bulk of infrastructure (private health insurance companies) in place.
And it is far, far simpler than the *************** coming out of the US Congress currently.