Saturday, March 23, 2019

PAUL KRUGMAN VS. WHO?


Anyone who has read the New York Times will likely recognize the gentleman on the right: He's Paul Krugman, Nobel Prize winning Economist and Columnist for the Times. It would be hard to be more distinguished than he. 

I'd be surprised if many of my readers recognized the gentleman in the left: He's Don McCanne, MD, who in addition to being a physician, has been all his life a student of health policy.  He currently serves as Chief Policy Fellow for the Physicians for a National Health Plan PHNP), a body in which he served as President in 2002 and 2003. There is no more passionate advocate for Single-Payer than Dr. McCanne, and I read his daily blog with the deepest respect.  

On Sunday, March 17, the Texas Tribune published Patrick Sviteck's story about Beto O'Rourke's pivoting on his healthcare plan preference:
Sviteck explains that O'Rourke, never more than luke-warm towards the notion of Single-Payer, seemed more comfortable embracing a policy considerably to the right of  it -- Medicare for America.  Sviteck quotes him:

"It responds to the fact that so many Americans have said, ‘I like my employer-based insurance. I want to keep it. I like the network I’m in. I like the doctor that I see,'" O'Rourke said. "It complements what already exists with the need that we have for millions of Americans who do not have insurance and ensures that each of them can enroll in Medicare. It then suggests additional investments in that program so it becomes the program of choice, and people who have private insurance migrate over to the Medicare system."
Someone questioned him:"So the greed has to stay in the insurance industry in your opinion?"
Beto paused, then said that he didn't see it as a function of greed. "I think I have to be respectful to people who just shared with me what I shared with you: They like the program they’re in, they like the insurance that they have," O'Rourke said. "If we become too ideological or too prescribed in the solution, we may allow the perfect to become the enemy of the good. And there are fellow American human lives depending on us finding a solution."

Upon reading this,  Dr. McCanne posted a very passionate statement about 
He says that virtually nobody in this country does. "The obvious point" he writes, "is that people do not have stable health care coverage throughout their lives." And as he makes clear, there are too many reasons why the insurance companies change, or their policies do, or the networks do.  I suggest you read his article I've linked above: I never knew there were so many reasons why the insurance you have can and will change, but I can testify that in my lifetime that has been my experience.  

And as for that shibboleth "freedom of choice," you have to go along with whatever your employer chooses to give you -- if he chooses anything. You get the doctors and the network that your employer chooses. But as McCanne says, with Single-Payer, you don't have to worry about doctors being in your network; You can choose any doctor, any hospital you want: they're all in the same network!  (This would be very much unlike Medicare for America, if it devolves into a two-tiered system -- one more pricey than the other -- those who belong to the medicare tier might find themselves priced out of the tier whose pricier doctors might not want to treat them. That sort of thing is happening as I write this. There is a physician in Kingston, well thought of,  whose receptionist told me: "Of course Doctor doesn't take Medicare. That's what you have? You should have told me from the get-go, and not wasted my time!" Luckily for Carol and me, we could find quite a few other good doctors in Kingston who do take Medicare.)

Thus this argument for Medicare for America -- that you can keep the insurance you have -- is, in McCanne's opinion, based upon a fallacy. And, as I said in my most recent post, Medicare for America, in my opinion, would be unlikely to last long, if for no other reason that no billion dollar company is going to sit quietly by while it is being put out of business -- however slowly. They'll deploy every dollar they have to lie, distort, and bribe.

Despite all this, Paul Krugman believes that eventually most of the Democratic candidates will be persuaded to move rightward and and embrace Medicare for America. In  his recent opinion piece,
Krugman asks, 
But even if optimistic claims about Medicare for All are true, will people believe them? And even if most people do, if a significant minority of voters doesn’t trust the promises of single-payer advocates, that could easily either doom Democrats in the general election or at least make it impossible to get their plan through Congress.
And he points out that -- just as there is more than one way to skin a cat -- there are in the world many ways proven successful in providing universal healthcare. "Every two years," he says,  "the Commonwealth Fund provides an invaluable survey of major nations’ health care systems. America always comes in last; in the latest edition, the three leaders are Britain, Australia and the Netherlands. 

"What’s remarkable about those top three is that they have radically different systems. Britain has true socialized medicine — direct government provision of health care. Australia has single-payer — it’s basically Bernie down under. But the Dutch rely on private insurance companies — heavily regulated, with lots of subsidies, but looking more like a better-funded version of Obamacare than like Medicare for All. And the Netherlands actually tops the Commonwealth Fund rankings."

Krugman then asks,  "So which system should Democrats advocate? The answer, I’d argue, is the system we’re most likely actually to create — the one that will play best in the general election, and is then most likely to pass Congress if the Democrat wins." 

He concludes, "To me, then, Medicare for America — which lets people keep employment-based insurance — looks like a much better bet for actually getting universal coverage than Medicare for All. But I could be wrong! And it’s fine to spend the next few months arguing the issue. What won’t be fine will be if activists make a no-private-insurance position a litmus test, declaring that anyone advocating a more incrementalist approach is no true progressive, or maybe a corrupt shill for the medical/industrial complex. As you might guess, my concerns aren’t drawn out of thin air; they’re things I’m already hearing."

So the next few months will be anything but boring! And the thing is: I'm really not 100% sure of where I am on all this.  In the readers comments section -- which I strongly urge you to read -- readers give their views about Krugman's opinions. In the first New York Times Pick, you can read:
"Private insurance is mostly there to say No, you can’t have that, but if you do, we’re not going to pay for it. And we currently pay through the nose for these companies to tell us that. Who in their right mind is “satisfied” w that? Only stupid people or people w ties to the health insurance industry. No, private health insurance, w the possible exception of “boutique” brands for the wealthy, should be abolished. I don’t often disagree w Mr. Krugman, but this time I do. Wholeheartedly. Is my view impractical? Let’s forget the polls and vote on it."

After reading this, I thought, "yes, yes! Those !*#@*! [the healthcare companies] should not be rewarded for what they've put us through! I agree 100 percent! But then I read:

"One of the problems that Progressives will have in selling Medicare for All is that they have made a compelling case for the utter corruptibility of politicians due to money in politics. The GOP over the years has made a much less honest but electorial effective case that "liberal elites" cannot be trusted. And Trump has demonstrated the weaknesses in oversight, check and balances, and the value of facts in our system of government in the face of extreme partisanship and the conservative media ecosystem. "So how do you convince the rightfully skeptical, currently insured but potentially persuadable, to let OUR Federal government take this much control over health care NOW? "Explaining all the positives of Medicare for All is easy relative to the challenge of explaining how THIS government, that will without question still be highly partisan in 2020 and still awash in big donor money, is capable of pulling this off. "Have a robust debate. If Medicare for All resonates with a solid majority of voters across a majority of states that's great. I hope it goes that way. "But if not, keep in mind that our democracy may not survive another 4 years of Trump and McConnell. Medicare for All is not the hill to die on. [Emphasis added]

After reading this, I think, OMG, of course, of course! This makes sense!

Let our good doctor, the esteemed Don McCanne -- only one year younger than I -- have the last word about what we activists for Single-Payer must bear in mind:

This is a time for PASSION. We have to get this message out there.

As with everything else, he is so right about this, too.

Dio

PS: If you'd like to leave a comment -- and I encourage you to do so -- simply click on the "number of comments" area, and share your thoughts in the "comment rectangle" that appears.

PPS: We know that there are plenty out there who have stories to tell -- stories of your trying to cope with our dysfunctional healthcare system. Trouble is, we don't know what these stories are! That's where you come in. If you have a story to tell, you can email me at indivisible12401@gmail.com. You can be as anonymous as you like. Thanks!


















2 comments:

  1. In 2009: Krugman acknowledged this in a NY times article"

    "Um, economists have known for 45 years — ever since Kenneth Arrow’s seminal paper — that the standard competitive market model just doesn’t work for health care: adverse selection and moral hazard are so central to the enterprise that nobody, nobody expects free-market principles to be enough. To act all wide-eyed and innocent about these problems at this late date is either remarkably ignorant or simply disingenuous.

    https://shadowproof.com/2009/06/29/krugman-on-republican-health-care-logic-the-great-ignorance-meets-the-great-disingenuousness/
    Anyone who thinks that our health care system is okay is simply too selfishly rich to care about everyone else, just not paying attention to the mounting horror stories, or being disingenuous.
    Take your pick.

    And yet 10 years later, Krugman is out to suppress progressives and keep the emphasis away from a full medical for all policy agenda by equivocating over a "real"
    debate that has already transpired and long since expired. .
    SEE: https://www.reddit.com/r/WayOfTheBern/comments/b44gh3/krugman_assumes_biggest_canopener_yet_shared_goal/

    The fact is that "litmus tests" are deployed by Big Money every single day!

    THE FACT IS THAT 55 YEARS AGO IT WAS DEMONSTRATED THAT PROFIT DRIVEN PRIVATE MARKET DOES NOT WORK FOR HEALTH CARE.
    And Krugman literally told us that himself a decade ago in that NY Times statement quoted above.

    To pretend that somehow this is now a false start by Progressives is a Trump style misdirection meant only to divide the political discussion.

    Krugman certainly knows better than most, which makes disingenuous his call for "a real debate," in which:

    Preserving their oligopolistic rentier profits is health insurers' main goal, and is a high priority of the political professionals they bribe and bully every day of every political career.

    Consequently all contrary legislation has previously been corrupted by, and will again need to run a gauntlet of, Congressional, MSM and 'think tank' sabotage, delay and bait-and-switch.

    Moving halfway towards compromise, with the corrupt status quo, before even running an election campaign on an anti-corruption platform, has been a prominent Centrist tactic since forever, and has a track record of blocking most major reforms while suppressing turnout and finding other ways to lose quite a few elections.


    Corruption is not necessarily illegal. It is an abuse of some standard, and a betrayal of the public trust. In particular,
    Corruption is the abuse of entrusted power for some personal benefit or private gain.
    Krugman is a shill for all things free market and corporate, and
    may be a corrupt shill for the medical/industrial complex

    ReplyDelete
  2. In February 2016 Forbes wrote a summary article documenting that Krugman had made a full pivoting 180 degree turn on his convictions. https://www.forbes.com/sites/johngoodman/2016/02/08/krugman-recants-on-heath-care-the-left-is-apoplectic/#190c6ed0166f
    They write:
    "For most of his career as an editorial writer for The New York Times, Paul Krugman has been an unapologetic advocate of single-payer health insurance or “Medicare for all,” as he sometimes calls it."

    "And he didn’t stop there. In the Krugman ideal healthcare system, even the providers would be government employees. It would be a world of “honest-to-God socialized medicine, in which government employees provide the care as well as the money.” "

    "As an example of why government provision of care would be better than private provision, he pointed to “the Veterans’ Administration, which runs its own hospitals and clinics, and provides some of the best-quality healthcare in America at far lower cost than the private sector.”

    “In healthcare, the free market just doesn’t work,” he wrote.

    What about those who disagree with him? They reflect “the greed of the medical-industrial complex” or “the lies of the right-wing propaganda” and besides that they are “vile and stupid,” he wrote."


    Now in calculating anticipation for the 2016 election, according to Forbes, Krugman reversed course in an effort to bolster electoral support for Hillary against Sanders that would preserve (an Insurance friendly ACA)

    the Affordable Care Act.


    Forbes continues on:


    "...[H}e completely abandoned every position on healthcare he has held for the past decade.

    He did this without even once informing readers the text they held in hand represents a change of viewpoint

    so breath taking it rivals the conversion of St Paul on the road to Damascus!


    He writes: (quoting KRUGMAN's article directly)

    "Yes, Obamacare did preserve private insurance … But the fact that some insurers are making money from reform (and their profits are not, by the way, all that large) isn’t a reason to oppose that reform. The point is to help the uninsured, not to punish or demonize insurance companies.""

    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    SO KRUGMAN, IN CURRENT FORM, IS NOT ONLY A SHILL FOR THE INSURANCE INTERESTS AND THE MEDICAL /INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX, BUT HIS MOST CURRENT ARTICLE ACTUALLY QUALIFIES HIM WITH A

    NEW STATUS OF A TROLL AS WELL.

    ReplyDelete

WHO ARE YOU TRYING TO FOOL, NANCY? Will the April 30 Hearing on Medicare For All Be Little More Than a Farce? That may well be the case...