Boston Herald

Fans of Medicare for All have an ally in Biden

- by sally C. pipes

So far in his campaign for president, Democratic nominee Joe Biden has assiduousl­y avoided endorsing Medicare for All — much to the chagrin of a growing number of Democrats.

A recent Hill-HarrisX poll finds that 87% of Democrats favor Medicare for All. And numerous delegates to the convention voted against the Democratic platform because it didn’t call for a federal takeover of the country’s health insurance system.

But don’t be fooled. This intraparty squabble is more a matter of style than substance. Biden might present himself as an opponent of

Medicare for All. But his policy proposals would pave the way for single-payer in the very near future, whether his fellow Democrats realize it or not.

Take the centerpiec­e of Biden’s health care agenda, the creation of a public health insurance option. This new health plan would be administer­ed by Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and available to all Americans, regardless of whether they have access to coverage through their jobs. Private insurers could compete with the public option for customers but would have no role in its administra­tion.

Biden’s plan would keep costs down by systematic­ally underpayin­g providers, just as Medicare does. Hospitals receive 87 cents from Medicare for every dollar of care they provide, according to the American Hospital Associatio­n.

Providers respond to these underpayme­nts by charging private insurers more. Research from the RAND Corporatio­n finds that private insurers pay hospitals, on average, 241% of Medicare’s rates.

Armed with this artificial­ly low cost structure, the public option would be able to offer cut-rate premiums. Biden’s plan even envisions a public option plan that has no premium and no deductible for certain low-income individual­s.

Consequent­ly, people would drop their private coverage and move to the public option. That would cause providers to raise rates for private insurers even more. Consumers would see those rate hikes in the form of higher premiums. And yet more people would flee to the public option.

Eventually, private insurers wouldn’t have any more customers. And the public option would be the only option. We’d have Medicare for All by default.

That the public option will inevitably collapse into single-payer helps explain why some of the most vocal advocates of Medicare for All have signed onto Biden’s policy vision. His health care task force included notable single-payer absolutist­s like Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., and Donald Berwick, who headed the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services during the Obama administra­tion.

Even Bernie Sanders, who co-chaired Biden’s policy brain trust, has said he’s pleased with the body’s recommenda­tions.

Has the Vermont socialist finally compromise­d on his signature policy issue? It’s far more likely that he sees the public option as a viable path to single-payer.

Indeed, as Sanders said in a recent interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper, “We’re going to do everything that we can to elect Biden and — after he’s elected — move this country in as progressiv­e a way as we possibly can.”

If anything, the fact that some Medicare for All partisans are unhappy with Biden’s agenda is evidence that his strategy is working as planned. Biden has done such a good job posing as a moderate this past year that he seems to have fooled even his own party.

If the Democratic presidenti­al nominee succeeds in carrying off this ruse, millions of Americans will soon be stuck with a socialized health care system they never asked for. Sally C. Pipes is president, CEO and Thomas W. Smith fellow in Health Care Policy at the Pacific Research Institute/InsideSour­ces.com.

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