Townhall
Finance...
Should
Everyone Be Required to Have Health Insurance?
by Michael
F. Cannon
February 1, 2012
When
Washington begins penalizing people for not purchasing health insurance
in
2014, it will mark the first time in history the federal government has
required nearly all Americans to buy a private product as a condition
of lawful
residence in the U.S. No part of the health-care law is less popular,
or more
essential to preventing it from crumbling like a house of cards, than
this
individual mandate.
Even if the
mandate were popular and constitutional, it would still be a bad idea.
It will
increase premiums, cost shifting and government rationing, while
promoting
irresponsibility. Indeed, its entire purpose is to enable supporters to
avoid
responsibility for their decisions.
Let’s start
with premiums. The mandate will increase premiums for households who
currently
do not purchase coverage, and tens of millions more (including at least
half of
employer-sponsored plans) who will have to purchase additional coverage
to
satisfy the mandate. A study issued by the left-leaning Commonwealth
Fund
estimates the law has already increased premiums 1.8% on average. That
will
rise as the mandate takes full effect. Some of the increase will
reflect the cost
of additional coverage—but if consumers valued that coverage, they
would have
bought it already.
Magnified
Effects
True, the
law will force insurers to reduce premiums for the sick, and the
mandate will
magnify that effect. But those same government price controls will
increase
premiums for healthier customers—and the mandate will magnify that
effect, too.
(Economist Jonathan Gruber, one of the law’s biggest proponents,
projects that
for some who buy policies in the individual market, premiums will more
than
double.) At best, those two effects cancel each other out. But these
provisions
also create incentives for healthy people to drop coverage, driving
average
premiums higher still.
Then
there’s how a mandate leads to government rationing. Like President
Obama,
ex-Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney tied a mandate to subsidies that help
people
buy the mandatory coverage. The higher-than-projected cost of those
subsidies,
plus the premium increases caused by the mandate, are leading desperate
state
officials to reduce those costs by rationing care.
Officials
have imposed price controls on premiums, which force insurers to limit
services. They are pushing price controls on providers, which could
exacerbate
Massachusetts’ already long waits for care. And they hope to impose
Canadian-style “payment reforms” that would financially reward
providers for
limiting services. (An early experiment has delivered zero savings and
in some
cases increased spending, yet it may still be denying care to people.)
Though
supporters claim the mandate will reduce cost shifting from uninsured
free
riders to the insured, the latter will see no savings. Researchers at
the
left-leaning Urban Institute estimate that in 2008, such cost shifting
amounted
to just $56 billion, or 2% of total health spending, and increased
premiums by
“at most 1.7 percent.” For comparison, the Dartmouth Institute for
Health
Policy and Clinical Practice estimates we waste more than 14 times that
amount
on unnecessary care. More important, the Commonwealth Fund study shows
the
federal law has already increased premiums by more than the mandate
could
reduce them by eliminating free riding.
The federal
law actually promotes free riding and cost shifting. My colleague
Victoria
Payne and I calculated that individuals could save up to $3,000 a
year—and
families of four could save as much as $8,000—by dropping their health
insurance, paying the penalty, and waiting until they are sick to
purchase
coverage. Massachusetts reported a nearly fivefold increase in such
free riding
after its mandate took effect. The federal law also offers $1 trillion
in
subsidies to tens of millions of Americans—shifting $1 trillion of the
cost of
their health care to taxpayers.
Personal
Responsibility
The
mandate’s greatest pretense is the idea that it promotes personal
responsibility. If that were the goal, Congress need only have enhanced
the
courts’ ability to collect medical debts. Supporters instead demanded a
mandate
precisely because it lets them avoid responsibility for their decisions.
Here’s how.
The federal law promotes irresponsibility by allowing healthy people to
wait
until they get sick to buy coverage. It creates that free-rider
problem, which
has been known to make insurance markets collapse. Supporters of the
law could have
taken personal responsibility for this instability they introduced into
the
market—say, by volunteering to pay the free riders’ premiums. Instead,
they
imposed a mandate, which attempts to stabilize the market by depriving
others
of their money and freedom.
Forcing
others to bear the costs of your decisions is the opposite of personal
responsibility. It is selfishness, not altruism.
The mandate
is not a conservative or free-market idea. Some Republicans who were
for it are
now against it, just as some Democrats once against it are now for it.
A
majority of conservatives and the overwhelming majority of libertarians
always
opposed it. It’s snake oil, no matter who prescribes it.
Free
markets—which no living American has seen in health care—would make
health care
better, more affordable, and more secure. The mandate makes such
progress
impossible.
If the
public understood the rest of the health-care overhaul as well as it
does the
mandate, the law would already be history.
Read this
and other articles at Townhall Finance
|