Tackling the fibs on McCain’s health-care plan
posted at 11:12 am on October 6, 2008 by Ed Morrissey
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For a while, Minnesotans didn’t hear much from the presidential campaigns, but a series of polls showing a tight race here has forced both campaigns to spend money here. During the football games yesterday, I saw a few spots from both campaigns, and one Obama ad appears in tight rotation in this market. It follows up on Joe Biden’s attack on John McCain’s health-care plans, and repeats the same arguments that CNN’s Political Ticker called “misleading”:
The figure Obama provided, $12,680, comes from a study published last month in the journal Health Affairs. That study found that “average annual premiums in 2008 are $4,704 for single coverage and $12,680 for family coverage.” But that same study reported the average cost people pay for employer-provided health care coverage is $721 for singles and $3,354 for family coverage. The rest is covered by the employer.
Those figures back up a conclusion from the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center: that McCain’s health plan, offering a tax credit of $2,500 per individual and $5,000 per family, would be a net tax cut initially for many. As the CNN Truth Squad has previously reported, the center calls McCain’s health care plan a tax cut for virtually all Americans through 2013 and for the middle-class through 2018, which is as far as the center has projected. But the center says long-term, some of those benefits might erode if the tax credit did not keep up with costs of health care.
Obama, at his campaign stop, cited studies that suggest millions of Americans may lose their employer-provided health insurance under McCain’s health plan. A study published in Health Affairs in September did estimate that 20 million people may lose employer-based coverage and take on other insurance coverage, and that plans would likely be “less generous.” McCain says his plan would give people more options, increase competition, and lower costs. Which side is right is a matter of opinion and difficult to predict.
Either way, Obama left out critical context. The $12,680 figure is the average total cost under current health care laws, when a large majority of insured Americans have plans through their employers. Employer contributions often lead employees to choose higher cost health plans than the would on their own, which in turn raises the average premium nationwide. And we can’t know exactly how costs would change, in either direction, under McCain’s plan.
Obama’s ad says that he will reform the health-care industry by attacking insurers. That makes for great populist sentiment, but lousy policy, even with people who have routine frustrations with their health insurers — and believe me, I’m one of them. Insurers are nothing more or less than risk pools, and government has already heavily regulated it, increasing both costs and risks. Part of the reason for this is that a lack of competition, intra-state and inter-state, makes for restricted choices, and the near-lock on the employer-provided model contributes to this.
McCain wants to reform this model by applying two different actions at the same time to unlock health-care offerings. He wants to give a large tax credit to encourage people to purchase health insurance on their own rather through their employers and allowing insurers to operate across state lines to offer plans. In order to fund this, McCain proposes to tax employer-offered plans. That makes the plan revenue neutral, but for the vast majority of American taxpayers, it will actually reduce taxes — and allow self-employed people to get their own insurance. That will make it easier for people to take risks and start new businesses or to work for themselves, which will create new demand for labor in the jobs they leave.
Will this work? It does have a risk of employers ending their health-care benefits, although not as large a risk as Obama implies. Employers offer benefits to attract better employees, and that pressure won’t change with this plan. It may encourage employers to offer more basic plans, but most employers offer a range of plans already. Employees often choose the most expensive plans, and often unnecessarily, because they only see a fraction of the real cost.
The McCain plan would force people to see the real cost of health-care plans and purchase more realistic coverage. That would lower the overall risk for the insurers and allow them to contain costs a little better, keeping premiums lower and expanding coverage to more people. It treats people like adults and uses the private sector to best advantage, rather than layering on another level of government mandates that distort the marketplace. The ability to move from plan to plan without the restricting filter of an employer benefit package should also make insurers more competitive and therefore more responsive.
Will it work? We can certainly debate that, but that’s not the debate Barack Obama and Joe Biden want. They would rather frighten people away from a fundamental reform of the structure of health insurance for their own purposes.
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Wouldn’t this also prove that Obama’s campaign went negative first… as part of his campaign’s erratic behavior?
Skywise on October 6, 2008 at 11:14 AM
Ed, I think that statement sums up the entirety of the Democratic platform.
SkinnerVic on October 6, 2008 at 11:14 AM
Biden just wants to be sure that McCainHealth will pay for Botox and hair plugs as needed.
Akzed on October 6, 2008 at 11:21 AM
Why be so complex, the simple response by McCain should always be this:
If you loved how congress handled, and oversaw FM & FM, you will love how they want to run their health care program…the same people who were watching our banking community, are the same one who want to run the health care program…never again!!
right2bright on October 6, 2008 at 11:22 AM
People will not care. Figuring things out takes too much work. They hear a number, and they just stick with it. You try to explain… but it’s too complicated for most people, so they just won’t care.
Abby Adams on October 6, 2008 at 11:25 AM
Obama and the Democrats want to do for Health Care what they’ve done for our Financial System – destroy it.
TheBigOldDog on October 6, 2008 at 11:25 AM
A few years ago, I was uninsured (by choice, I could afford it but decided that as a non-smoking, healthy 23 year old, I could risk it to pay off my student loans more quickly).
I wanted to have a routine, yearly physical, so I called around to local doctor’s offices to find out how much they would charge. They kept asking me what insurance I had. I kept saying, “I don’t have insurance I plan to pay with cash.” Not a single one of the 6 places I checked with could tell me how much it would cost out of pocket. They could tell me my copay with Aetna or with Blue Cross, but had no idea what the entire cost was.
Now, that might be an exception (a problem unique to the Santa Monica area), but, when I looked online, it seemed people in other regions were having the same trouble. The system is stacked in favor of people either having employer provided insurance, state provided insurance or going to free clinics. There’s no longer a concept of routine care being something that people just budget for.
JadeNYU on October 6, 2008 at 11:30 AM
I don’t know how you clean up this mess. But if verifiable facts and statistics are cited, campaigns should be required to submit them for verification.
Biden lied during the debate about the health care numbers. He treated McCain’s tax credit as a mere tax deduction. They are completely different tax policy concepts, and the difference makes all the difference in the world. And the greatest problem is that lies like this torpedo the warranted debate about what really is the better plan.
I’ve thought Biden is a douche too many times in the past. But he’s such a liar that GOP pols should stop giving Biden a pass and call him out for the charlatan that he is. He’s pondscum.
BuckeyeSam on October 6, 2008 at 11:30 AM
Another lie in this ad (or maybe it’s just an indelicate misdirection) is when the ad tries to make an issue of the check going to the insurance company instead of to the individual.
What’s wrong with that? Except for those who planned on not buying insurance with the money.
The point that Obama is trying to slip in is that the check directly to the company won’t benefit the individual.
MarkTheGreat on October 6, 2008 at 11:34 AM
The NYT, CNN and MSNBC covered this new Osama Obama/Biden lie fully this morning!
/sarc
MrScribbler on October 6, 2008 at 11:36 AM
i dont think anyone would or should be afraid to debate mccain on the health care proposals. now, regardless of whose policy you support, the fact of the matter remains that the mccain camp has shaped its talking points on the matter thusly:
we want to model the regulatory environment of health insurance on the regulatory environment of the banking and finance sectors.
that is a GUARANTEED loser in a short debate exchange. you wont see mccain bring it up, and if he does, you wont see obama even bother to defend his own plan, because he wont have to. the sound byte is too damning for mccain to use healthcare as an attack line
ernesto on October 6, 2008 at 11:37 AM
I’m not so concerned about employers dropping coverage. Health coverage like 401Ks are benefits to attract and retain good employees. I doubt many employers will drop it.
omnipotent on October 6, 2008 at 11:39 AM
The problem with complex issues like this is that a meaningful explanation is too long to make a good sound bite for the campaign. Even a quick explanation is enough to make one’s eyes glaze over. Fear mongering is much easier.
highhopes on October 6, 2008 at 11:39 AM
“They could tell me my copay with Aetna or with Blue Cross, but had no idea what the entire cost was.”
that simply illustrates just how far the entire stinking industry has strayed from free market principles — something John would like to correct and yet duh1 has NO intention of doing — which is, frankly, bad for you [!]
Buckaroo on October 6, 2008 at 11:40 AM
Once more, the media acts as part of the Obama campaign.
drjohn on October 6, 2008 at 11:45 AM
I would say that if you don’t know the lay of the field, you shouldn’t tinker with the game.
Personally, I’m trying to figure out where things are broken to the point that you need to change the financing part of healthcare in the way McCain thinks it ought to go.
We have to deal with our insurance company on nearly a daily basis, because we have two health care plans in the family — PPO (Pacificare) and HMO (Kaiser). The PPO refuses to pay its own doctors and laboratories for services unless we first “bill” Kaiser as primary. It’s our job to “bill” Kaiser. Kaiser has a rule that unless we use its facilities (or it’s an emergency), it won’t pay anything. Pacificare knows this, and didn’t require us to do anything until two years ago, when, without announcement, they changed the rules. We still have Pacificare doctors complaining to us about how slow our insurance is in paying; we have to remind them that THEY signed a contract with Pacificare, and are obligated to take only what Pacificare pays them, when Pacificare pays them. Some Pacificare doctors accept this, others don’t, pointing out that we are liable for payment if Pacificare doesn’t.
This has improved somewhat since I complained to my company’s HR people about what Pacificare was doing; they managed to get a accounts manager from Pacificare — and not one from India either — on the line. But if I didn’t have the company to bat for me, we would have been at 120 days payment for some stuff, and in collections.
My point: if the company acts as an intermediary, I’m assured of an ombudsman if things go wrong, because there are two of us (myself and the company) invested in the health plan. If I have to go it alone, experience shows that the insurance company will try to screw me.
unclesmrgol on October 6, 2008 at 11:51 AM
This plan would be DOA because of the AARP. The average cost does not reflect the higher cost of being over 50, or if you have a pre-existing condition. This would be an attempt to balance the system on the backs of older Americans whose tax credits wouldn’t come close to covering the cost of their coverage. DOA.
flyoverland on October 6, 2008 at 12:02 PM
The Dems have used fear mongering for years. Biden is a pro with this tactic, much like Kerry. Kerry is currently showing ads for his reelection with him hugging elderly people that he claims would freeze to death without his power.
Biden is a master at this same game of loss if they are not elected again. The elderly will loose their pension, women will lose the right to murder their children, anyone that can’t take care of themselves, or are used to not working for a living will starve, freeze and be exterminated if the Republicans get in. The old shill of how he will take care of you, when in fact he will ignore you and just wants the job, the money and the power.
Hening on October 6, 2008 at 12:06 PM
Obama’s ad is so fricking confusing that it’s hard to decide where to pick it apart. As far as the point about the check going to the insurance company, I see two points.
If you are an employee working for an employer who has a group health plan (and, hence, the employer necessarily pays the premium on your behalf), the money is going to the insurance company anyway–as it should. McCain’s $5,000 tax credit then is used on your tax return to offset the increased tax liability that you’ll incur from including your health insurance premiums paid by the employer in your taxable income.
I think there’s an additional benefit to the McCain plan. If his credit exceeds your tax liability attributable to including the employer-paid premiums in income, I think that excess credit gets directed to a health savings account (HSA). If that’s the check going to the insurance company, I guess I say, “So what?” I believe that’s a way to toss the money into a tax-deferred savings account from which other expenses can be paid. It’s a bit of forced savings for medical expenses. Dems like regulation, so what’s their objection? Now they’re free marketers? Oy.
Second, if you’re self-employed, and you pay your own premiums, I don’t understand the Obama point about the check going to the insurance company. Yes, you pay premiums, so money does go to the insurance company. How does Obama expect self-employeds to purchase health insurance? Mental telepathy? Again, however, I guess the Dems are raising the same bogus objection to the excess credit going to the HSA maintained by an insurance company–as discussed above. The free-market Dems, I suppose, want taxpayers to have the excess credit be paid to the taxpayers so that they can buy extra pork rinds and X-Box games.
Seriously, talk about distracting the public. Obama and Biden are lying so much about McCain’s play that it’s impossible to compare it to Obama’s plan. Heck, I haven’t seen a succinct description of Obama’s plan.
McCain should shove their lies up Obama’s a** tomorrow night in the debate. It’s one thing to debate the merits of the candidates’ proposals. But Obama and Biden are buying precious time grossly misrepresenting McCain’s proposals. Obama and Biden aren’t offering differing reasonable interpretations of McCain’s plan; they’re lying about it. And they’re lying about it because health care is a women’s issue, and they’re banking on confusing high-school educated women into believeing McCain’s going to flush their health-care insurance down the drain–whether that’s true or not.
Get some stones, McCain, and defend yourself. Have Palin explain an illustration using one of the two tax returns that she just released. A before and after summary. Women will believe Palin on this issue.
BuckeyeSam on October 6, 2008 at 12:07 PM
So you are admitting that you endorse telling lies about your opponents?
MarkTheGreat on October 6, 2008 at 12:19 PM
why is it? Why is it that pols can spit out numbers without either knowledge of cost. when i say knowledge with numbers. When I tom can say that the 40 to 47 million americans lack helth insurence is in fact a lie people on the left will scorn me. No where in this world is it that anyone can seek medical treatment an be given acces to the medical atention that they need than they can here in any place else.
just stop to think that the left will always count people who ELECT NOT TO HAVE OR PAY FOR MEDICAL TREATMENT.
TomLawler on October 6, 2008 at 2:31 PM
Gov’t sponsored health insurance continually cuts back benefits. I am on medicare and required a cardiac echo
(cardiologists bill to interpret $234 Medicare approved $49.63 echo itself $143 medicare approved $18.79 doppler color flow $182. medicare approved $3.58) Obviously I also buy Medicare supplement to pay the 20% medicare approves but does not pay. Guess who makes up the lack of payment–private insurance (who also bargain for lower costs and then the uninsured get hit with the highest possible charge that can be made. Doctors are not allowed to collect more than medicare allows and thus care for patients with little or no profit. Young people will no longer pursue medical education if the rate of financial return will not at least keep them at mid level of the middle class. A medical student incurs tremendous debt for his/her education and then setting up an office or buying out an established practice. Hospitals and clinics will not be able to buy the expensive technology and employ the personnel to use it if they cannot get sufficient return to justify offering it. McCain’s program will do less to harm our current level of care while Obama’s will bring our level of care down to almost total incompetence with specialized diagnostic and therapeutic modalities available only in few centers with waiting lists that will result in death for many on those lists. Fewer medical professionals, less equipment, will make us just like Canadians who come to the USA for care rather than wait for years on a list. It is not that Canada does not have good doctors and health professionals, it is that they are over worked and spread too thin in order to limit the costs to the government. They have lost many medical professionals to the USA and elsewhere.
Pat in NC on October 6, 2008 at 3:25 PM
Oversight of insurance companies is done at the state level. So, if people started buying insurance from out of state, they might end up without some long standing protections from insurance company fraud. Some might pay premiums to companies found to not even exist when it comes time to have medical expenses paid for. About 15 years ago we had such a problem in California with Caribbean based auto insurance companies.
I know that it is racist of me to mention this since many of the people in the Caribbean don’t look like Santa Monica insurance agents.
snaggletoothie on October 6, 2008 at 6:45 PM
They have a wierd Obama radio ad running here that says the McCain plan gives the entire tax credit to the insurance companies, leaving you to pay the bill while Obama will lower the cost of your insurance. It also says the McCain plan will make you pay taxes on your health insurance for the first time ever.
A stern male voice reads the description of McCain’s plan and then a light soothing female voice takes over to describe the wonderful Obama plan
It makes the McCain plan sound like a rip off
Meanwhile, Michigan is a state that taxes the insurnace preiums paid by employers. If an employer wants to upgrade the insurance he provides, his state tax increases accordingly
entagor on October 6, 2008 at 9:32 PM
The lead photo for this story really shows that “BY THEN” Biden is descended from Klingons, and we know what Klingons goal was-domination of the universe by force.
MSGTAS on October 7, 2008 at 10:01 AM
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