Healthcare Plan Based on Economic Fantasy

As
the healthcare debate rages on, there is one reality that even the proponents
of this hostile takeover of healthcare by government cannot ignore – and that
is money. The government simply does not have the money for a new,
expansive, public healthcare plan. The country is in a deep recession
that will deepen even further with the coming collapse of the commercial real
estate market. The last thing we need is for government to increase and
expand taxes to pay for another damaging, wasteful program. Foreigners
are becoming less enthusiastic about buying our debt, and creating another
open-ended welfare program when we cannot pay for what is already in place,
will not help. Champions of socialized medicine want to tax the
rich, tax businesses that already cannot afford to provide health plans to
employees, and tax people who don’t want to participate in the government’s
scheme by buying an approved healthcare plan. Presumably, all these taxes
are to induce compliance. This is not freedom, nor will it improve
healthcare.
There
are limits to how much government can tax before it kills the host. Even
worse, when government attempts to subsidize prices, it has the net effect of
inflating them instead. The economic reality is that you cannot distort
natural market pressures without unintended consequences. Market forces
would drive prices down. Government meddling negates these pressures,
adds regulatory compliance costs and layers of bureaucracy, and in the end,
drives prices up.
The
non-partisan CBO estimates that the healthcare plan will cost almost a trillion
dollars over the next ten years. But government crystal balls always
massively underestimate costs. It is not hard to imagine the final
cost being two or three times the estimates, even though the estimates are bad
enough.
It
is still surreal that in a free country we are talking only about HOW
government should fix healthcare, rather than WHY government should fix
healthcare. This should be between doctors and patients. But this
has been the discussion since the 1960s and the inception of Medicare and
Medicaid, when government first began intervening to keep costs down and make
sure everyone had access. The result of Medicaid/Medicare price controls
and regulatory burden has been to drive more doctors out of the system – making
it more difficult for the poor and the elderly to receive quality care!
Seemingly, there are no failed government programs, only underfunded ones.
If we refuse to acknowledge common-sense economics, the prescription will
always be the same: more government.
Make
no mistake, government control and micromanagement of healthcare will hurt, not
help healthcare in this country. However, if for a moment, we allowed the
assumption that it really would accomplish all they claim, paying for it would
still plunge the country into poverty. This solves nothing. The
government, like any household struggling with bills to pay, should prioritize
its budget. If the administration is serious about supporting healthcare
without contributing to our skyrocketing deficits, they should fulfill promises
to reduce our overseas commitments and use some of those savings to take care
of Americans at home instead of killing foreigners abroad.
The
leadership in Washington persists in a fantasy world of unlimited money to
spend on unlimited programs and wars to garner unlimited control. But
there is a fast-approaching limit to our ability to borrow, steal, and
print. Acknowledging this reality is not mean-spirited or cruel. On the
contrary, it could be the only thing that saves us from complete and total
economic meltdown.
Congressman Ron
Paul of
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