Republican Health Reform Proposals
Now that the Florida primary is over and we await super Tuesday, it's
time to look closely at health proposals of Republicans. Unlike
Democrats, they're turning to market rather than governmental
solutions. Governor Romney, of course, led the effort in Massachusetts
to create a universal solution requiring every individual to buy
insurance, but he now says that solution applies only to Massachusetts
and shouldn't be applied to other states.
Republican candidates want more options for individuals. They would
create new deductions or tax credits for health insurance. Lower
income people would get subsidies to purchase private insurance.
People could purchase health insurance across state lines, and
regulations and mandates would be reduced to make health insurance
less costly. Reduced premiums would bring new buyers into the market,
expand competition, and force insurers and providers to offer more
affordable options.
Here's what the surviving GOP presidential candidates are saying.
- John McCain: "It is good tax policy to take away the bias toward
giving workers benefits instead of wages. It is good health policy to
reward having insurance no matter where your policy comes from. To use
their money effectively, Americans need more choices."
- Mitt Romney, "The federal government needs to loosen regulations on
the nation's health-insurance providers, increasing competition and
thereby lowering patient costs. The right answer is less government,
less regulation, more individual responsibility, and more of the
market dynamics that propel the rest of our economy."
- Mike Huckabee: "I advocate policies that will encourage the private
sector to seek innovative ways to bring down costs and improve the
free market for health-care services. We can make health care more
affordable by making health insurance more portable from one job to
another, and making health insurance tax deductible for individuals
and families as it now is for businesses."
The Republican presidential candidates want to give people the same
tax benefit whether they purchase a policy on their own or they get it
at work. They don't want insurance tied to the workplace. Nor do they
want individual mandates requiring everyone to buy insurance as
Senator Clinton proposes. Senator Obama supports a mandate for
children to get health insurance but not everyone. "The reason
Americans don't have health insurance isn't because they don't want
it, it's because they can't afford it."
Major candidates of both parties support:
- More prevention
- greater use of electronic health records
- more information for consumers on choices and prices
- better chronic-care management
- medical malpractice reform. (assuming John Edwards has been
effectively eliminated from the race)
- more consumer choice and control over health insurance
Barring a sweeping Democratic victory in the fall with control of
Congress and the presidency and a veto-proof majority, complete
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