Healthcare: Underestimating the cost
Kurt Brouwer August 28th, 2009
Source: Senate Joint Economic Comm.
Government-run healthcare: What will it cost?
The ironic part about the current discussions of healthcare reform costs is that proponents of the plan initially said — and some are continuing to say — that healthcare reform would save money. Unfortunately for them, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) pointed out that the legislation before the House of Representatives (H.R. 3200) would actually add significantly to the deficit by as much as $1 trillion over the next 10 years.
That news caused many in Congress to gulp hard, yet the CBO estimate is almost certainly low if history is a guide. I thought it would be useful to look at how far off previous estimates from Congress on Medicare costs have been in the past.
When Medicare was passed, various future estimates of costs were made by Congress. Those estimates were wildly off base, so much so that it is doubtful that Medicare would have passed, had there been an accurate cost estimate. The chart above shows the estimate for the year 1990 of $12 billion versus actual spending of $110 billion. The $12 bill estimate was adjusted for inflation. So, the actual costs were nine times higher than estimated.
This report from the Senate’s Joint Economic Committee gives some historical detail for Medicare and other programs:
Are Health Care Reform Cost Estimates Reliable (Joint Economic Committee, July 31, 2009, Senator Sam Brownback (R-KS)
Since the end of World War II, major health care reform proposals have generally always cost more-sometimes significantly more-than the highest cost estimates published while the legislation was pending…
…Medicare (entire program). In 1967, the House Ways and Means Committee predicted that the new Medicare program, launched the previous year, would cost about $12 billion in 1990. viii Actual Medicare spending in 1990 was $110 billion-off by nearly a factor of 10.ix
A certain level of error in cost projections is to be expected, especially regarding sectors as complicated as health care. But as Table 1 shows, the foregoing examples represent extreme under-estimates, with error ratios ranging from 1.2:1 to 17:1. What explains this phenomenon? For reasons that may never be entirely understood, health care appears to be an area with great room for overly optimistic assumptions regarding changes in the behavior of patients and providers, technological innovation, the practice of medicine, program take-up rates, future health cost inflation, and the likely success of proposed cost-control mechanisms.
…Whatever the causes, it seems there is a kind of Murphy’s Law of health care legislation: “If it can cost more than the highest available official estimate, it probably will.” The House and Senate are currently considering health care reform bills that would cost in the vicinity of $1 trillionxviii over the first 10 years and $2.4 trillionxix over the first 10 years of full implementation…
Here is the table referenced above:
Source: Senate Joint Economic Comm.
As you can see from the table, this is not just a problem for Medicare nor is it a problem limited to the U.S. For a variety of reasons, estimating costs of government-run healthcare seems to be quite difficult. So, I would not take current estimates as being cast in stone. In fact, I would assume they are very low as Congressional estimates have been in the past.
- Economy , Geopolitics , debt , deficit , healthcare , income taxes , inflation
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Kurt,
Excellent! Why anyone believes that government can deliver services at costs competitive with the private sector is beyond me. There is no objective evidence for this contention.
Amtrak and the US Postal Service are other examples of government operating failures.
The role of government does not include operating large (or any) segments of the economy.
Do we need to go bankrupt as a country for the majority of people to realize this?
If you take the people with expensive paid for health coverage, why then since the industry roots out “prior conditions”–cherry picking! then sure, they get claims they pay. Mediciare costs by comparison and takes all those who need it no matter what.This is clearly a bullshit post to belittle what no American with Medicarte is willing to give up! It is tried. It is trusted. worried about money? Ask how much goes into foreign aid and for our military and the one thousand bases we operate throughout the world! and we are not to ttake care of our citizens?
Fred–apparently, you misread this post. I am not suggesting anyone give up Medicare. Rather, I am suggesting that we exercise prudent skepticism about the numbers Congress is tossing out about the cost of health insurance reform. The cost of many previous programs was wildly off. No reason to think it is any different this time around.