Monday, February 14, 2011



Do Republicans really oppose making health-care insurance cheaper?

By Ezra Klein

The health-care debate has a cyclical nature, and I don't want to keep writing the same posts over and over again. So rather than write a whole new piece on the GOP's rediscovery of the Congressional Budget Office's estimate that the health-care law will reduce the labor supply (which they recast as "destroying jobs"), I'll just link to the long post I did on the subject in January.

In case you don't want to click over, though, the short version is this: If you make health-care insurance cheaper and make it harder for insurance companies to deny people coverage, then a certain number of people who would like to leave the labor force but can't afford or access health-care insurance without their job will stop working.

To understand why, imagine a 62-year-old woman who works for IBM and beat breast cancer 10 years ago. She wants to retire. She has the money to retire. But no one will sell her health care under the status quo. Under the health-reform law, she can buy health care in an exchange because insurers can't turn her away due to her history of breast cancer. So she'll retire. Or imagine a 50-year-old single mother who wants to home-school her developmentally disabled child but can't quit her job because they'll lose health care. The subsidies and the protections in the Affordable Care Act will give her the option to stop working for awhile, while under the old system she'd need to stick with her job to keep her family's health-care coverage. That's how health-care reform can reduce the labor supply. If either case counts as a destroyed job, then so does my winning the lottery and moving to Scotland in search of the perfect glass of whiskey.

Moreover, this would happen for any health-care reform that reduced costs and improved access. So when Republicans say that they want abetter health-care reform bill that does even more to reduce costs, they're calling for legislation that, according to them, would "destroy" even more jobs than the Affordable Care Act. If they're against all legislation that might destroy jobs in this way, then they're against making health care cheaper. In fact, by that logic, we could just jack the price of health-care insurance up and make it easier for insurers to turn individuals away. Then even more people would have to stick with their employers. Job creation!

By Ezra Klein | February 11, 2011; 6:41 PM ET
Categories: Health Reform

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