Equity and Health Care
Wall Street Journal editorial looks at reforming health care through
the tax code. That is, giving individuals the same tax benefits in
buying health insurance as employers, along with capping the tax
benefit for employer-provided insurance (which the editorial notes,
"benefits the rich", to borrow John Edwards' rhetoric)
They're uncharacteristically missing a chance to effectively raise
taxes on "the rich." Curbing these subsidies could generate
billions for their elaborate "universal" health programs. More to
the point, this is a simple matter of equity, usually Democratic
terrain. If the government is going to support health insurance,
then those subsidies ought to apply regardless of a person's
income,
where they work, or how they purchase their insurance.
So why the Democratic silence? Perhaps it's because they think such
a change would interfere with their main policy goal, which is slow
but steady progress toward government control of the health-care
market. Or possibly it's because many of the most generous
tax-subsidized health plans come from union-negotiated contracts.
Or maybe Democrats simply don't want to concede that President Bush
has a point.
Investor's Business Daily also addresses the divergence in health care
proposals between greater government control and free market
solutions:
Its key idea is to give every individual a real choice of insurers
and plan types, with incentives for buying frugally and choosing
the one that delivers the best coverage and care for the money.
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