USA TODAY International Edition

‘Medicare for All’ good for business, say some CEOs

- Phil Galewitz

EASTON, Pa. – Walk into a big-box retailer such as Walmart or Michaels, and you’re likely to see MCS Industries’ picture frames, decorative mirrors or kitschy wall décor.

Adjacent to a dairy farm a few miles west of downtown Easton, MCS is the nation’s largest maker of such household products. But MCS doesn’t make anything here anymore.

It has moved its manufactur­ing operations to Mexico and China, with the last manufactur­ing jobs departing this city along the Delaware River in 2005. MCS now has about 175 U.S. employees and 600 people overseas.

“We were going to lose the business because we were no longer competitiv­e,” CEO Richard Master said. And one of the biggest impediment­s to keeping labor costs in line, he said, has been the increasing expense of health coverage in the United States.

Today, he’s at the vanguard of a small but growing group of business executives who are lining up to support a “Medicare for All” national health program. He argues not that health care is a human right, but that covering everyone with a government plan and decoupling health care coverage from the workplace would benefit entreprene­urship.

In February, Master stood with Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., outside the Capitol after she introduced her Medicare for All bill.

“This bill removes an albatross from the neck of American business, puts more money in consumer products and will boost our economy,” he said.

As health costs continue to grow, straining employer budgets and slowing wage growth, others in the business community are beginning to take the option more seriously.

While the influential U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other large business lobbying groups strongly oppose increased

Kaiser Health News

“It’s critical ... to engage employers ... because our current system is hurting employers almost as much as it is patients.” Melinda St. Louis Public Citizen

government involvemen­t in health care, the resolve of many in the business community – especially among smaller firms – may be shifting.

“There is growing momentum among employers supporting singlepaye­r,” said Dan Geiger, co-director of the Business Alliance for a Healthy California, which has sought to generate business support for a universal health care program in California. About 300 mostly small employers have signed on.

“Businesses are really angry about the system, and there is a lot of frustratio­n with its rising costs and dysfunctio­n,” he said. Geiger acknowledg­ed the effort still lacks support from any Fortune 500 company CEOs. He said large businesses are hesitant to get involved in this political debate and many don’t want to lose the ability to attract workers with generous health benefits. “There is also a lingering distrust of the government, and they think they can offer coverage better than the government,” he said.

In addition, some in the business community are hesitant to sign on to Medicare for All with many details missing, such as how much it would increase taxes, said Ellen Kelsay, chief strategy officer for the National Business Group on Health.

Democrats propel debate

For decades, a government-run health plan was considered too radical an idea for serious considerat­ion. Yet Medicare for All has been garnering more political support in recent months, especially after a progressiv­e wave helped Democrats take control of the House this year.

Several 2020 presidenti­al candidates, including Sens. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., strongly back it.

The labor unions and consumer groups that have long endorsed a single-payer health system hope that the embrace of it by employers such as Master marks another turning point for the movement.

Supporters of the concept say the health system overall would see savings from a coordinate­d effort to bring down prices and the eliminatio­n of many administra­tive costs or insurance company profits.

“It’s critical for our success to engage employers, particular­ly because our current system is hurting employers almost as much as it is patients,” said Melinda St. Louis, campaign director of Medicare for All at Public Citizen, a consumer-rights group.

Master, a former Washington lawyer, worked on Democratic Sen. George McGovern’s presidenti­al campaign before returning to Pennsylvan­ia in 1973 to take over his father’s company, which made rigid paper boxes. In 1980, he founded MCS, which pioneered the popular front-loading picture frame and steamless fog-free mirrors for bathrooms. The company has grown into a $250 million corporatio­n.

Master frequently travels to Washington and around the country to talk to business leaders as he seeks to build political support for a single-payer health system.

In the past four years, he has produced several documentar­y videos on the topic. In 2018, he formed the Business Initiative for Health Policy, a nonprofit group of business leaders, economists and health policy experts trying to explain the financial benefits of a single-payer system.

Dan Wolf, CEO of Cape Air, a Hyannis, Mass.-based regional airline that employs 800 people, calls himself “a free market guy.” But he also supports Medicare for All. He said Master helps turn the political argument over singlepaye­r into a practical one.

“It’s about good business sense and about caring for his employees and their well-being,” he said, adding that employers should no longer be saddled with the cost and complexity of health care. “It makes no more sense for an airline to understand health policy for the bulk of its workers than for a health facility to have to supply all the air transporta­tion for its employees,” he said.

Employers also are an important voice in the debate because 156 million Americans get employer-paid health care, making it by far the single-largest form of coverage.

Master said his company has tried various methods to control costs with little success, including high deductible­s, narrow networks of providers and wellness plans that emphasize preventive medicine. Insurers who are supposed to negotiate lower rates from hospitals and doctors have failed, he added, and too many premium dollars go to covering administra­tive costs. Only by having the federal government set rates can the United States control costs of drugs, hospitals and other health services, he said.

“Insurance companies are not watching the store and don’t have incentives to hold down costs in the current system,” he said.

Glad the boss is trying to make a difference

What’s left of MCS in Pennsylvan­ia is a spacious corporate office building housing administra­tive staff, designers and a giant distributi­on center piled high with carton boxes from floor to ceiling.

MCS pays an average of $1,260 per month for each employee’s health care, up from $716 in 2009, the company said. In recent years, the company has reduced out-of-pocket costs for employees by covering most of their deductible­s.

Medicare for All would require several new taxes to raise money, but Master said such a plan would mean savings for his company and employees.

MCS employees largely support Master’s attempt to fix the health system even if they are not all on board with a Medicare for All approach, according to interviews with several workers in Easton.

“I think it’s a good idea,” said Faith Wildrick, a shipper at MCS who has worked for the company for 26 years. “If the other countries are doing it and it is working for them, why can’t it work for us?”

Wildrick said that even with insurance her family struggles with health costs as her husband, Bill, a former MCS employee, deals with liver disease and needs many diagnostic tests and prescripti­on medication­s. Their annual deductible has swung from $4,000 several years ago to $500 this year as the company has worked to lower employees’ out-of-pocket costs.

“I’m really glad someone is fighting for this and trying to make a difference,” said Wildrick.

Jessica Ehrhardt, the human resources manager at MCS, said the effort to reduce employees’ out-of-pocket health costs means the company must pay higher health costs.

Asked about Medicare for All, Ehrhardt said, “It’s a drastic solution, but something needs to happen.”

Kaiser Health News is a nonprofit news service covering health issues. It is an editoriall­y independen­t program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

 ?? PHIL GALEWITZ/KHN ?? Richard Master, CEO of MCS Industries in Easton, Pa., says health care costs are a constant struggle.
PHIL GALEWITZ/KHN Richard Master, CEO of MCS Industries in Easton, Pa., says health care costs are a constant struggle.

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