Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Save three unpopular parts of Obamacare

If Republican­s trash the health care law’s cost controls, they are going to make things a whole lot worse, argues columnist MEGAN MCARDLE

- Megan McArdle, the author of “The Up Side of Down: Why Failing Well Is the Key to Success,” is a columnist for Bloomberg View.

As Republican­s consider repealing Obamacare, what bits should they be looking to keep? A lot of people will have different answers to this, of course, but to my mind the most important and unobjectio­nable bits of Obamacare are payment reform, comparativ­e effectiven­ess research and the tax on gold-plated health-care plans.

These are not, you will notice, the most popular bits of Obamacare, the ones that President-elect Donald Trump seems to favor — such as making health insurers cover people regardless of pre-existing conditions. But all three attempt to tackle the biggest problem with our health-care system: its exorbitant cost.

Americans pay a lot more for health-care services than people in other countries, in significan­t part because because of the unique structure of our system, which has allowed provider costs to grow much faster than anywhere else.

Economist Milton Friedman famously divided spending into four types:

1. I’m spending my own money on myself, in which case, I want to get the best combinatio­n of price and quality. This is the sort of spending that middle-aged women do on expensive handbags.

2. I’m spending my own money on someone else, in which case I

mostly care about price. This is why you get so many books you never read as gifts.

3. I’m spending someone else’s money on myself, in which case … WEEEEE! This is the kind of spending that employees do on expense accounts. (Not me, of course. I mean employees with less moral fiber.)

4. I’m spending someone else’s money on someone else, in which case … who cares?

In our health care system, almost no spending falls into Category 1. Medicaid and some employer insurance looks like Category 2; the rest falls into Category 3 or 4. These are very expensive categories of spending, because the incentives for restraint are small, and when someone tries to add constraint­s, usually another someone (typically a politician goaded by angry voters) intervenes to make them stop. As our system gets more expensive, pressure rises for third-party payers to pick up even more of the tab for our health care — which of course, just makes the problem worse.

Astute readers may ask why the problem is so much more serious here than in countries that have an even bigger government presence in health care. There are two reasons.

First, health care spending in those countries tends to look more like Medicaid, with heavy price controls. America has immense difficulty doing this, because the decentrali­zed structure of our government makes it easier to lobby against unpopular payment controls.

Second, the fact that our market is kind-of-free-butnot-really makes it extremely difficult for anyone, public or private, to crack down on prices. Providers have a great deal of negotiatin­g power, both because they can lobby the government and because they can find other payers to give them better prices if one insurer or government program tries to play hardball on reimbursem­ents. So we end up with the worst of both worlds.

Our high costs make everything else harder. Want to do a single-payer system, as Mr. Trump has suggested in the past? There’s not enough money in the budget, and voters will revolt if you try to raise taxes to pay for it. Want a more consumer, market-driven system? Services are simply too expensive for most people to buy. In theory, they could assiduousl­y save up to pay for them, but getting people to save is hard and some will fall through the cracks.

Obamacare tried to tackle this problem in three ways.

First, it levied the “Cadillac tax” on extremely generous health insurance plans. The fact that employer-sponsored health insurance benefits aren’t taxed like regular compensati­on is one of the major drivers behind our third-party-payer problem.

This is, to be sure, an awkward and inefficien­t way to approach the problem. It would be much more logical to cap, or eliminate, the tax deduction for those benefits. But at least this curbs some of the worst effects of keeping the deduction.

And the reason it’s structured so bizarrely is that the tax-deductibil­ity of employer-sponsored health insurance is politicall­y sacred, even though wonks hate it. The Obama administra­tion was able to slip it through only because there was so much else going on that the Cadillac tax didn’t get much scrutiny. If Republican­s repeal it, they will have a very hard time putting anything as good back into place, much less something better.

A second part of Obamacare that Republican­s should consider keeping are some of the payment reforms.

Right now, Medicare will pretty much pay for any fool thing your doctor wants to do to you. This “fee for service” system encourages doctors to perform lots of services. The idea behind various payment reforms is that they’ll pay the doctor based on health outcomes (or at least per patient). If the doctors save money, they get a bonus. If hospitals readmit too many patients, they get hit with a penalty.

I don’t want to oversell the benefits of these reforms: They are modest. They move spending out of Category 4, which is good, but they move it into Category 2, which has problems of its own. Doctors now have less incentive to overtreat but more incentive to undertreat. And patientcen­tered payment models make small practices riskier, because a handful of patients’ unexpected setbacks can make the business lose money.

On the other hand, it’s not obviously worse than the old system. As long as we’re going to have Medicare (and we are), we have to structure payments somehow; on balance, there’s a decent argument for keeping the new structure rather than reverting to the old one.

The third thing Republican­s should consider keeping is the Independen­t Payment Adviser Board, known by many in the GOP as the “death panel.” Its lethal reputation is exaggerate­d; IPAB does not consider the fates of individual patients and doesn’t have legal authority to deny treatments. What it can do is look at the evidence and recommend payments based on cost-effectiven­ess.

I have real concerns over whether the IPAB will end up stifling innovation in the name of keeping costs down. But a government agency that evaluates the current state of medical knowledge, and disseminat­es that knowledge to doctors, is a good idea.

So these are things that Republican­s should think about keeping. That’s a very different question from what they will consider keeping.

Unions hate the Cadillac tax; providers and health care firms will lobby fiercely to junk the payment reforms. And in the context of a repeal, Republican­s will not be able to balance the costs of these programs against a wide array of new goodies for voters. Indeed, they’ll be undercutti­ng one of their biggest assets in getting a repeal done: the fact that so many motivated lobbies will benefit from junking the law.

Thus, I expect the gap between what we should keep and what we will keep to loom large indeed. We’re most likely to keep the popular parts of the program, like forcing insurers to sell insurance to any customer who wants to buy it, which are also unfortunat­ely the parts of the program that are destabiliz­ing the insurance market. What we’re most likely to lose is the unpopular things that are needed to control costs and keep the individual market from tipping into a death spiral: the mandate to buy insurance, the Cadillac tax, the payment reforms.

It’s even likely that Republican­s will end up doing a partial repeal that makes the program worse than either what we had before or what we have now. From a policy perspectiv­e, that’s crazy. But in Washington, that kind of crazy is perfectly logical.

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