Thursday, August 25, 2005

Article Calls for Divorcing HealthCare from Employment

It's just common sense, folks. Healthcare should not be dependent on employment and shouldn't be dragging down our business competitiveness.
I linked to a PNHP summary of the article because I couldn't find the original article on the newspaper's page: Time for a healthy divorce from employment

This article has some awesome facts - some of my faves:
For the past five years, employee health plan costs in Berkshire County and elsewhere have been rising at double digit rates, and the same is predicted for the coming year. For some small business owners, the rate of rise in health insurance prices has been even steeper.

In 2003, GM’s cost to build a midsize car in the United States included $1,400 for health insurance. However, in Canada, GM was able to manufacture a car for $1,400 less than in the U.S. because Canada has a single payer national health insurance program rather than private insurance tied to employment.

A joint letter signed by the top executives of the Big Three automakers (GM, Ford, and Daimler/ Chrysler) in Canada, said that in addition to providing “essential and affordable health services for all” single payer “significantly reduces total labor costs compared to the cost of equivalent private insurance services purchased by U.S. -based automakers,” and “has been an important ingredient in the success of Canada’s most important export industry (automobiles).”
Canadian national health insurance saved Canadian automakers $4 per hour per worker in 2003 (in U.S. dollars). “High health care costs have created a competitive gap that’s driving investment decisions away from the U.S.,” said the vice chairman at Ford.

... single payer is not socialized medicine, because health care itself would be provided by privately-owned hospitals and doctors’ offices. The only change would be in the funding and administering of health care by a “single payer” (the government), rather than the current hundreds of insurance payers. The government already pays for more than 60 percent of health care, including Medicaid, Medicare, and the Veterans Administration health care system, as well as paying for public employees’ private health care coverage and giving tax subsidies to private insurance companies.


There's even more good stuff in the article
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