Will my taxes go up and service go down?
Originally Posted by Marcus Aurelius
Probably yes, on both counts (eventually).
The current bill does little for cost containment -- it's all about coverage expansion. It simply provides massive subsidy of a very bad, very inefficient system in which no one has any real incentive to rein in costs. Earlier in the debate, there was much discussion about "bending the cost curve downward." The bill's proponents seem to have forgotten all about that. Now they have to use Enron-style accounting to keep the 10-year cost projections under a trillion bucks!
Virtually everyone agrees that our present system is too expensive to be sustainable over the long term, and that some sort of
real reform is needed, but this bill will make the problem worse -- not better.
In one way, it reminds me of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009: The more this rotten lemon marinates in the sun, the more people see how bad it is. That's why its cheerleaders are obsessed with rushing it to a vote before (already shaky) support collapses.
I believe most Americans would strongly prefer that political "leaders" offer proposals based on realistic projections and honest numbers. Were they to do so, perhaps polls would even indicate majority support for some sort of health care reform plan.
But as it now stands, supporters of health care "reform" are losing the debate, and will probably have to distribute even more pork to a number of congressional districts to get it past the finish line.