It is 'time for our country to
join every other major industrialized nation on Earth and guarantee health care
to all citizens as a right, not a privilege.'
Just before Sunday's
Democratic primary debate in South Carolina, Bernie Sanders released
the details of his Medicare-for-All universal healthcare proposal, saying it is
"time for our country to join every other major industrialized nation on
Earth and guarantee health care to all citizens as a right, not a
privilege."
The plan
(pdf), also known as single-payer healthcare, builds on the successes of both
Medicare and the Affordable Care Act (ACA), "eliminating expensive and
wasteful private health insurance," and saving taxpayers money by
"dramatically reducing overall health care costs and bringing down
skyrocketing prescription drug prices which are far greater in the United
States than in any other country."
According to the Sanders
campaign:
The shift to universal health
care would be paid for with a 2.2 percent health care premium (calculated under
the rules for federal income taxes); a 6.2 percent health care payroll tax paid
by employers; an estate tax on the wealthiest Americans and changes in the tax
code to make federal income tax rates more progressive.
Under the plan, individuals
making $250,000 to $500,000 a year would be taxed at a rate of 37 percent. The
top rate, 52 percent, would apply to those earning $10 million or more a year,
a category that in 2013 included only the 13,000 wealthiest households in the
United States.
An academic analysis
(pdf) released alongside the proposal shows that it would save $6 trillion over
the next 10 years compared to the current system.
"Instead of being held
hostage to a corporate system based on profits and price gouging, with Sanders'
Medicare-for-All plan we can finally have a system based on patient need."
—RoseAnn DeMoro, National Nurses United
—RoseAnn DeMoro, National Nurses United
"The net savings from
single payer come from reduced spending on administrative activities, in both
private insurers and providers’ offices, reduced spending on monopoly prices
for pharmaceuticals and medical devices, and a slowdown in the growth of
spending because of controls on administrative costs and drug prices,"
University of Massachusetts Amherst economics professor Gerald Friedman states
in the analysis.
Friedman's calculations show
that the typical family earning $50,000 a year would save nearly $6,000
annually in health care costs. "The average working family now pays $4,955
in premiums for private insurance and spends another $1,318 on deductibles for
care that isn’t covered," the campaign said in a statement. "Under
Sanders' plan, a family of four earning $50,000 would pay just $466 per year to
the Medicare-for-all program."
Heralding his plan during
Sunday's debate, Sanders "spoke to Democratic heroes and liberal
values," Paul Waldman wrote
at the Washington Post.
"What a Medicare-for-all
program does is finally provide in this country health care for every man,
woman and child as a right," Sanders said. "Now, the truth is, that
Frank Delano Roosevelt, Harry Truman, do you know what they believed in? They
believed that health care should be available to all of our people."
He continued:
Do you know why we can’t do
what every other...major country on Earth is doing? It’s because we have a
campaign finance system that is corrupt, we have super PACs, we have the
pharmaceutical industry pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into campaign
contributions and lobbying, and the private insurance companies as well. What
this is really about is not the rational way to go forward — it’s Medicare for
all — it is whether we have the guts to stand up to the private insurance
companies and all of their money, and the pharmaceutical industry. That’s what
this debate should be about.
Sanders' chief rival Hillary
Clinton, who has gone
on the attack regarding single-payer in recent weeks, has taken a more
narrow view, focused on defending the ACA and "making it work." But
Sanders notes that even under the ACA, 29 million are still uninsured and
millions more are "underinsured"—unable
to afford high co-pays or deductibles.
"Instead of being held
hostage to a corporate system based on profits and price gouging, with Sanders'
Medicare-for-All plan we can finally have a system based on patient need, with
a single standard of quality care for all, regardless of ability to pay, race,
gender, age, or where you live," said National Nurses United executive
director RoseAnn DeMoro in
a statement on Monday. "That's a beautiful thing."
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