Our Own Ruling Class Desperately Wants to Lose This War
Scott Jennings Took the CNN Panel to School on Birthright Citizenship and NATO...
Oh My God, Someone Really Went There About the Artemis II Launch...and It's...
The Reactions to Justice Jackson's Questions During Birthright Citizenship Argument Were G...
Wait, Air Canada's CEO Is Stepping Down Because the Video Statement Wasn't in...
NYPD Snaps 10-Year Losing Streak to FDNY in Charity Hockey Game
Throw Iran to the Wolves
Marie Harf Just Told the World How the Left Really Feels About Women's...
Tony Evers, the So-Called 'Education Governor,' Just Made Wisconsin Classrooms More Danger...
'The View' Panel Thinks It's Reckless to Do What in Trump's America?
Debunking the Lone Wolf 'Myth'
California's Think-Alike Dems Cancel Debate Over 'Lack of Diversity'
Iranian Aggression Demands Return to Abraham Accords Peacemaking
Every Child Has a Mother and Father. Pennsylvania to Pretend Otherwise.
Trump’s Strategic Iranian Oil Balancing Act: Now It's Time to Finish the Job
OPINION

The Trillion Dollar “Bargain”

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
The Trillion Dollar “Bargain”

Credit where credit is due: the latest White House argument for health reform is compelling. The administration has figured out how to sell a massive expansion of government as “fiscally conservative.” On Thursday, the CBO released estimates for the President’s bill, projecting an overall cost savings. The White House now trumpets that the health-reform bill will lead to the biggest legislated reduction of the deficit since the first term of the Clinton Presidency.

Advertisement

“You have to spend money to save money” is a popular expression. No doubt, that’s what the White House is hoping Americans will think when they read the numbers. Throughout this process, the CBO has projected savings: Earlier this month, for example, the CBO revised its estimate of the 2009 Senate health reform bill, projecting $118 billion in estimated savings over the next ten years (a reduction from the previous estimate of $130 billion). Thursday’s estimate – $138 billion – suggests slightly more deficit reduction.

Sean Hannity FREE

The trouble is, taxpayers will be spending $875 billion in the hope of saving $118 billion in the Senate bill, or spending $940 billion in the hope of saving $138 billion in the reconciliation bill. That’s an 8:1 ratio for the Senate bill, and 7:1 (rounded) for the reconciliation bill – assuming, of course, that government programs stay on budget.

That means that to “save” a dollar in Washington, you have to spend seven dollars to get it. The White House allies are enthusiastic. “That’s a pretty good deal,” Ezra Klein wrote in his Washington Post blog. Paul Krugman agrees, describing it in his New York Times blog as a “bargain.”

The refrain that this is a “deal” or a “bargain” strikes at the core of what ObamaCare really is. Because, of course, there’s no deal and no bargain. ObamaCare’s spending shifts the poorest patients from expensive emergency-room care into a proper regiment of checkups and preventative health – which may produce savings per treatment, even if it costs taxpayers more in the long term. But beyond that, little about ObamaCare’s spending has anything to do with saving.

Advertisement

If deficit reduction was really the goal of health reform, the President could simply table a bill with all of his proposed taxes and Medicare cuts. Implement those measures, and you could cut trillions of dollars from the deficit over the same ten years, instead of mere billions.

If President Obama truly believes new insurance regulations and state-based health exchanges will curb health inflation and make insurance fairer for all, he could enact those ideas at little cost to taxpayers, and sleep better knowing he’d helped Americans in the private insurance market.

In other words, much of ObamaCare could happen without spending a dime.

Of course, that’s not what’s happening, because the real goal of the exercise is hiding in plain sight. The real goal is to sugarcoat a massive expansion in government entitlements at the precise moment the U.S. is least equipped to pay for them. ObamaCare adds a projected 16 million people to Medicaid and CHIP entitlement rolls – projected to cost $434 billion, or almost half the price of the plan. $466 billion of the rest subsidizes lower income families to help them buy private insurance – with no guarantee that health inflation won’t outpace those subsidies a few years later. (The remainder - $40 billion - is pocket change by the standards of Obama era Washington.)

This explains why Democrats think the proposed legislation is a good bargain. The bargain isn’t that health reform spending buys deficit reduction. The bargain is that Democrats are buying government-run, Canadian-style health insurance for a growing number of Americans just as they’d always hoped to – and all it’s going to take to pretend it’s fiscally responsible is an extra dollar of additional new taxes and savings for every seven in spending.

Advertisement

Instead of “Medicare for all,” they’ve concocted “Medicaid for more.” And trading the promise of a tiny stab at the deficit, eventually, is a cheap concession to get it, especially since there’s little anyone can do if those savings haven’t appeared in ten years’ time. For taxpayers, it could prove to be the most expensive “fiscally conservative” legislation in history.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement