Senate Dysfunction and Health Care Cost Control: In Private Sector We Trust? - 麻豆女优 Health News /news/080910frakt/ 麻豆女优 Health News produces in-depth journalism on health issues and is a core operating program of 麻豆女优. Thu, 16 Apr 2026 06:05:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.5 /wp-content/uploads/sites/8/2023/04/kffhealthnews-icon.png?w=32 Senate Dysfunction and Health Care Cost Control: In Private Sector We Trust? - 麻豆女优 Health News /news/080910frakt/ 32 32 161476233 Senate Dysfunction and Health Care Cost Control: In Private Sector We Trust? /news/080910frakt/ /news/080910frakt/#respond Mon, 09 Aug 2010 09:33:00 +0000 http://khn.wp.alley.ws/news/080910frakt/ There’s good news and bad news. The good news is that if cost-saving provisions of the new health reform law work, Medicare solvency will be聽extended by 12 years, according to the program’s trustees. The bad news is that the new law will only extend Medicare solvency by 12 years: it’s聽still聽predicted to go bust,聽in 2029.聽

Worse yet, the Senate has reached聽such聽a聽level of dysfunction聽that it聽requires聽60 votes under normal procedure to pass any significant bill or amendment (as George Packer聽聽in The New Yorker last week). The new health law that promises just a dozen more years of Medicare solvency聽only passed the Senate because Democrats had those 60 votes last December. They no longer do and likely won’t for the聽foreseeable聽future. Under these legislative conditions, can more health cost control legislation pass?聽

This is not just about Medicare. States, business and family budgets are also straining from the high costs of care. Public and private health care costs are linked. In a recent聽, Harvard University health economist Joe Newhouse argued that there are limits to how far Medicare payments to providers can fall below those of the private-sector ones. If they are too low, providers may turn away Medicare patients, creating problems for beneficiaries’ access to necessary care. Given the political power of the Medicare constituency, that’s not something politicians are likely to get away with.

Thus, Medicare’s cost problems will not be solved without solving those of the entire system, which will involve paying providers less. It’s a daunting technical challenge and a politically difficult one. Nobody likes a pay cut. Can government be part of the solution?

Notice the sense of this question. 聽I am not questioning whether government聽should聽be part of the solution. I am not asking whether government聽can propose聽solutions. I am considering our government’s apparent inability to address serious, long-term problems (except in cases of historically rare levels of single-party control), and asking whether it聽can pass聽a solution, or part thereof.

If not,聽this聽leaves a vacuum for private-sector approaches. Employers and individuals are not going to stand for double-digit percentage premium increases for much longer. Gradually, they will begin to demand that something be done. Just as Americans turned toward managed care in the 1990s after Congress failed to vote on Clinton’s proposed reforms to the system, they will again seek innovative health plan designs that promise lower premiums.

The hottest trend in health plan design is the consumer-directed health plan, higher deductible plans sometimes coupled with a health savings account. Among the 700 firms that participated in a聽, the proportion for which high deductible plans were the most popular plan type offered more than doubled from聽six percent聽in 2008 to 13聽percent聽in 2010. In theory, shifting greater risk of health care costs from insurers to policyholders in exchange for lower premiums should lower those costs. When you have to pay out-of-pocket for something, you buy less and seek good deals.

Will this theoretical expectation work and, if so, for whom and for how long? To date the聽听产耻迟听. Questions remain about long-term implications and the extent to which such plans can really control costs for severe and costly acute care (for which prices far exceed the deductible), whether they make sense for low-income individuals or whether they will lead persons with chronic illnesses or disabilities to forgo necessary care.

Equally important, however, is whether these聽consumer-directed plans (or whatever private-sector innovations that fill the cost control policy void)聽will enjoy a long-term embrace by Americans.聽Remember, managed care worked too, until it became聽intolerably rigid for many people.

It’s clear that the private sector,聽unencumbered聽by a requirement to overcome a filibuster, can implement changes. So, when it comes to the thorny problem of health care costs and with the聽Senate in seemingly endless deliberation, do we, must we, say, “In the private sector we trust?” If you find that unappealing,聽good luck trying to fix聽the聽Senate.

Austin Frakt is a health economist and an Assistant Professor of Health Policy and Management at Boston University’s School of Public Health. He blogs at

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