Health Care and the New Federalism

November 27th, 2007 | by gene |

This article actually comes from another blog, written by a law professor named Paul Balkin, the url below takes you to the original in case you would like to see more of what he has to say. He quite adeptly points out that it is cheaper to insure EVERYONE, than to have those without health care using emergency rooms as their clinics. Read it. It is a GOOD idea, whose time has come, THIS is the direction health care reform must take. Michael Moore’s documentary Sicko touches on this idea but this states the case as clearly as anything I’ve read. I like it. This issue CAN be left to the states, but the states need leaders, and people to point these truths out. Be one of those. Share this. Thank you. much love, :^) gene

Health Care and the New Federalism

In the Nineteenth and early Twentieth Centuries state governments led the nation in developing progressive public policy initiatives. There were experiments in democracy including state laws abolishing slavery, passing civil rights laws, banning child labor, regulating wages and hours, and expanding suffrage to black men and later to women. From the late 1930s through at least the 1990s the nation stepped away from the idea that the states should be the leaders in setting public policy. Instead, we came to rely on the national government to set the standard, with a federal minimum wage, social security, national civil rights laws, and medicare. Since the 1990s the Congress, controlled or stymied by Republicans, has done little to expand social policy. Thus, the United States remains the only western nation without some sort of national health care or health insurance.

It is time for the states to step in, as they did a century ago. As Justice Brandeis noted, “there must be power in the States and the Nation to remold, through experimentation, our economic practices and institutions to meet changing social and economic needs.” This is now beginning to take place in the field of health care. Massachusetts has required that all adults have health insurance. With state backing insurance carriers will be forced to insure all people, and with all people insured the rates can be rationalized. Under such a program health care costs ought to decrease, because those who previously did not have health insurance will no longer be relying on emergency rooms for what little health care they could obtain. San Francisco has embarked on a plan to give subsidized for free health care to all uninsured adults in the city. The program seems generous, but in fact, if managed carefully, it could save the city money. It is much cheaper to give people primary care when they are just starting to get sick then give them emergency care down the road. An ounce of prevention – or a dollop of cash for early health care – will indeed be worth many pounds and many dollars of cures later on. San Francisco will also require that all businesses with more than twenty employees provide health insurance.

We may soon see a new bifurcated America: states and cities where people have access to health care and places where they do not. This will be like the US in 1850 – states with slavery and states where there was no slavery. Or the US in 1910 – states with child labor and those without child labor. If these experiences are any guideline, the states and cities with progressive health care will be more prosperous than those without decent health care. Many states will reject such reforms, arguing that mandatory health insurance is bad for business. But, many states and cities will refuse to join the race to the bottom. Eventually the slaggards will be brought along, by a federal program, no doubt, just as eventually Congress banned child labor. The states today can learn much from the progressive reformers of the last century. Local programs that lead to a healthier, better educated, more secure work force paid off in the late Nineteenth and early Twentieth Centuries. The free states and the states that banned child labor were far more prosperous than those that did not.

As more states and cities take the lead the pressure will increase for those in Washington — even the die-hard conservatives in the Bush administration and in Congress — to realize that we have a health care crisis which must be solved. The next administration will hopefully have a Congress to work with on the issue, pointing out that the states are already on the march, and it is time for the national government to get in step. Ultimately, fighting against health care will be a losing issue, just as fighting social security and medicare proved to be a losing issue. Just as the states can learn from the history of state initiatives, so too might the Bush administration and its allies in Congress learn from their party’s lost and futile attacks on social security and medicare. Perhaps instead of ranting about the costs and claims of big government, the conservatives will come to the table with ideas and suggestions that can create a national system for health coverage. Meanwhile, the brave and creative states will push forward, creating a healthy America for some while in other places health care will remain problematic.

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