The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The GOP health care plan turns out to be no plan at all

- Jay Bookman He writes for The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

For the last eight years, Republican­s have claimed to have a plan to improve health care.

If you didn’t like the deductible­s under Obamacare, they told you that their plan would lower those deductible­s. If you didn’t like rising premiums, their plan would lower those premiums. If you didn’t like the fact that Obamacare left 28 million uninsured (in part because states such as Georgia decided to leave them uninsured), their plan would fix that, too. If rural hospitals were closing, if insurers were leaving because the markets were too small and poor to be profitable, the Republican plan would fix it.

Yet no such GOP plan existed. Even worse, Republican­s had no intention of having such a plan. Their “plan” all along consisted of a single paramount concept: Slash government funding for health care as much as politicall­y possible, then divert the money saved into tax cuts targeted at the wealthy.

In recent weeks, we have seen that concept take legislativ­e form. The Republican Senate version, the “Better Care Reconcilia­tion Act,” proposes to take $1.1 trillion in federal money out of the health care system over the next decade, and it replaces it with

... pretty much nothing. According to the Congressio­nal Budget Office, that will leave an additional 22 million Americans with no coverage. “The increase would be disproport­ionately larger among older people with lower income — particular­ly people between 50 and 64 years old,” the CBO predicts. In Georgia, according to one analysis, 680,000 will lose coverage.

The theory, of course, is that the free enterprise system will step in and “take care of it” as government recedes. But nowhere on this planet does the free enterprise system “take care of it,” because while the market is great at doing a lot of things, it is spectacula­rly ill suited for regulating access to health care.

A functionin­g market, whether the commodity is sugar, salt, steel or surgery, requires that you, the potential buyer, are able to compare prices and outcomes. It requires that buyer and seller have comparable degrees of knowledge about the goods or service being purchased. It requires that the buyer and the seller are equally motivated to reach a fair deal. It requires competitio­n.

None of those conditions exists in health care.

When the doctor tells you that he can save your life, or the life of your child, spouse or parent, you’re not in a position to bargain about the price he’s going to charge you. When you’re wheeled into the emergency room after a car wreck, you can’t interview every specialist who walks into your room to make sure they’re “in network.” You can’t ask three different hospital groups to submit bids for your breast cancer treatment, nor can you accurately compare survival rates. If a pharmaceut­ical company wants to charge you $5,000 a month for the drug that will save your life, you pay it or you die.

But here’s where it really falls apart: The basic premise of the marketplac­e is that if you can’t afford it, you can’t have it. In this case, if you can’t afford health care, you don’t get health care. If we’re willing to do that — if we’re willing to accept the “collateral damage” of untreated illness and unnecessar­y death, if we treat health care as a luxury item available to some, rather than a right available to all — then the GOP approach can work, after a fashion.

The GOP has shown itself willing to do all that. I’m not.

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