The Phoenix

Eternal life of gov’t programs

- LowmanS. Henry Columnist Lowman S. Henry is chairman & CEO of the Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research.

Ronald Reagan astutely observed that “government programs, once launched, never disappear” and he concluded such programs are “the nearest thing to eternal life we’ll ever see on this earth.” The current debate over reforming the nation’s health care system, and efforts at controllin­g in costs at both the federal and state levels, are proving the former President was correct.

Despite being handed control of the U.S. House of Representa­tives, the U.S. Senate and the presidency in successive election cycles pledging repeal and replacemen­t of the Affordable Health Care Act, better known as Obamacare, Republican­s have been unable to do so. Minor changes were approved in the U.S. House, but the Senate failed to achieve unity even among Republican­s.

Part of the reason is that the American Left — Democrats and their apostles in the news media — demonize even modest changes calling proponents everything from uncaring to racist. They view skyrocketi­ng premiums and the slow motion collapse of the Obamacare exchanges as furthering their ultimate goal: a national single payer health care system.

Thus even attempting to slow the growth of federal. health care spending has become an elusive goal. For example, U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey had advanced a plan to slow the growth of federal Medicaid spending by gradually increasing the state share of benefit costs for able bodied adults. Keep in mind able bodied adults were never covered under Medicaid before Obamacare created an entirely new class of entitled recipients.

Note that Sen. Toomey has not proposed eliminatin­g those benefits. His plan would only gradually require states to begin paying the same share to that class of Medicaid recipients as they currently pay to other classes of beneficiar­ies of the program. He wants to slow the rate of increase in federal spending.

Similar problems in placing Medicaid on a financiall­y sustainabl­e footing plague state lawmakers. The state House has taken a step in the right direction by passing a bill that would require households of up to four persons with annual incomes exceeding $246,000 to pay an average Medicaid co-pay of just $50.00 per month.

Setting aside the valid question of why any household with a quarter of a million in income per year is even on a government health care program, asking for a $600.00 annual co-payment is eminently reasonable. State Rep. Dan Moul (R-Adams), the bill’s prime sponsor, says that modest change would save the commonweal­th about $6 million per year..

For his efforts Moul, like Toomey has been excoriated by the Left. Toomey’s proposed changes have been denounced as “radical,” while Moul has been accused of staging a “middle of the night” po- litical win. This despite the fact the sun was shining on the capitol dome when the House vote was taken.

The time has come for elected officials at all levels to ignore the over-heated rhetoric from the Left. The fact is Obamacare is in a death spiral, and with a budget deficit somewhere north of $1.5 billion state government cannot afford to continue paying for social services that increase at a rate of seven percent annually.

Minimal co-payments and work requiremen­ts for those with the physical and mental capacity to work are neither cruel nor unreasonab­le. In a more sane era, former President Bill Clinton — with bipartisan support — establishe­d a successful welfare-to-work program that reduced the welfare rolls and preserved those program for those truly in need.

A friend of mine is fond of the saying “quicker than the speed of light a privilege becomes a right.” That is what happens when government programs are created or expanded without regard for the economic consequenc­es. Guardians of the welfare state believe every American has a right to ever-increasing government assistance regardless of the costs. Not only does that defy the laws of economics, but it ultimately will result in the collapse of those programs inflicting great pain on the very people such professors of big government claim to want to protect.

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