|
Cheese Headcases
Wisconsin reveals the cost of "universal" health care.
Wall Street Journal
Tuesday, July 24, 2007 12:01 a.m. EDT
When Louis Brandeis
praised the 50 states as "laboratories of democracy," he didn't claim that
every policy experiment would work. So we hope the eyes of America will turn
to Wisconsin, and the effort by Madison Democrats to make that "progressive"
state a Petri dish for government-run health care.
This exercise is
especially instructive, because it reveals where the "single-payer,"
universal coverage folks end up. Democrats who run the Wisconsin Senate have
dropped the Washington pretense of incremental health-care reform and moved
directly to passing a plan to insure every resident under the age of 65 in
the state. And, wow, is "free" health care expensive. The plan would cost an
estimated $15.2 billion, or $3 billion more than the state currently
collects in all income, sales and corporate income taxes. It represents an
average of $510 a month in higher taxes for every Wisconsin worker.
Employees and businesses
would pay for the plan by sharing the cost of a new 14.5% employment tax on
wages. Wisconsin businesses would have to compete with out-of-state
businesses and foreign rivals while shouldering a 29.8% combined
federal-state payroll tax, nearly double the 15.3% payroll tax paid by
non-Wisconsin firms for Social Security and Medicare
combined.
This employment tax is
on top of the $1 billion grab bag of other levies that Democratic Governor
Jim Doyle proposed and the tax-happy Senate has also approved, including a
$1.25 a pack increase in the cigarette tax, a 10% hike in the corporate tax,
and new fees on cars, trucks, hospitals, real estate transactions, oil
companies and dry cleaners. In all, the tax burden in the Badger State could
rise to 20% of family income, which is slightly more than the average
federal tax burden. "At least federal taxes pay for an Army and Navy," quips
R.J. Pirlot of the Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce business lobby.
As if that's not enough,
the health plan includes a tax escalator clause allowing an additional 1.5
percentage point payroll tax to finance higher outlays in the future. This
could bring the payroll tax to 16%. One reason to expect costs to soar is
that the state may become a mecca for the unemployed, uninsured and sick
from all over North America. The legislation doesn't require that you have a
job in Wisconsin to qualify, merely that you live in the state for at least
12 months. Cheesehead nation could expect to attract health-care free-riders
while losing productive workers who leave for less-taxing climes.
Proponents use the familiar argument for national health care that this will
save money (about $1.8 billion a year) through efficiency gains by
eliminating the administrative costs of private insurance. And unions and
some big businesses with rich union health plans are only too happy to dump
these liabilities onto the government.
But
those costs won't vanish; they'll merely shift to all taxpayers and
businesses. Small employers that can't afford to provide insurance would see
their employment costs rise by thousands of dollars per worker, while those
that now provide a basic health insurance plan would have to pay $400 to
$500 a year more per employee.
The plan is also openly
hostile to market incentives that contain costs. Private companies are
making modest progress in sweating out health-care inflation by making
patients more cost-conscious through increased copayments, health savings
accounts, and incentives for wellness. The Wisconsin program moves in the
opposite direction: It reduces out-of-pocket copayments, bars money-saving
HSA plans, and increases the number of mandated medical services covered
under the plan.
So where will savings
come from? Where they always do in any government plan: Rationing via price
controls and, as costs rise, waiting periods and coverage restrictions. This
is Michael Moore's medical dream state.
The last line of defense
against this plan are the Republicans who run the Wisconsin House. So far
they've been unified and they recently voted the Senate plan down. Democrats
are now planning to take their ideas to the voters in legislative races next
year, and that's a debate Wisconsinites should look forward to. At least
Wisconsin Democrats are admitting how much it will cost Americans to pay for
government-run health care. Would that Washington Democrats were as
forthright. |