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<text id=94TT1263>
<title>
Sep. 19, 1994: Health Care:Better Off Dead?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Sep. 19, 1994 So Young to Kill, So Young to Die
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
HEALTH CARE, Page 40
Better Off Dead?
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Lawmakers act as if modest reform is still alive, but it may
do more harm than good
</p>
<p>By Dan Goodgame/Washington--Reported by Julie Johnson and Dick Thompson/Washington
</p>
<p> The pitch sounded so straightforward and practical in those
TV commercials aired by the Republican Party over the summer.
"We can make health insurance affordable now, without the Clinton
government-run system...If you lose your job, you won't
lose your coverage...Let's do it now!" That message, polls
show, has resonated with the 85% of Americans who already have
health insurance. Their priority, by and large, is to make their
own coverage more secure and affordable, rather than to finance
elaborate subsidies for the uninsured. And now that they have
beaten back the major overhaul of health care that Democrats
had proposed, one would expect Republicans to seize their moment.
</p>
<p> Instead, as Congress straggles back to Washington this week,
Senate minority leader Bob Dole and other Republicans are backing
away from the "simple insurance reforms" they have touted for
months. Republican Party chairman Haley Barbour, who commissioned
the "Do it now" ads, told reporters last week that it would
be better for Congress to do nothing on health this year, rather
than attempt a last-minute compromise. The main reason for this
retreat--as some cynical lawmakers have known all along--is that there is no simple way to make health insurance secure,
affordable and portable. One reason is the seesaw effect: forcing
down insurance costs for older Americans and those who get sick
can force insurers to raise premiums beyond the reach of many
among the young and the healthy. Result: growing ranks of uninsured.
</p>
<p> Pivotal lawmakers and many of Clinton's top advisers predicted
last week that none of the incremental reforms now before Congress
looks likely to attract majority support, mostly because each
bill might cause more problems than it solves. What is left
of the health-care debate for this season, then, is in large
part political positioning for the battle's rejoining next year.
</p>
<p> To be sure, a handful of lawmakers is still trying to pass some
worthwhile, if limited, reform in the four to six weeks remaining
in this Congress. President Clinton hasn't stopped encouraging
the labors of Senate majority leader George Mitchell, who retires
this year and turned down an appointment to the Supreme Court
in order to push for health reform. Mitchell remains committed
to fight for any helpful reform he can get, as does a shrinking
band of moderate Republicans led by Rhode Island Senator John
Chafee. Ted Kennedy, the Massachusetts Democrat, is one of the
diehards. He told TIME, "I've never thought the best should
be the enemy of the good." And Ira Magaziner, chief architect
of the now abandoned Clinton plan, is gamely working with Senator
Harris Wofford of Pennsylvania and other Senate liberals on
a "Kids First" plan to extend insurance to children who now
lack it. All these players are wearing their game faces; they
expect the health-care struggle to continue right through Congress's
scheduled Oct. 7 adjournment.
</p>
<p> But after a White House strategy session among a dozen of the
Clintons' top health and political advisers last Wednesday night,
an official summed it up: "There was a lot of doubt that we're
going to get anything meaningful this year." And next year will
only be tougher, with more Republicans expected to be elected
to Congress in November. Clinton's supporters console themselves
by noting that he isn't likely to be tested on his stern, fountain-pen-wagging
threat to veto any bill that fails to guarantee universal coverage.
"At least," said a political adviser, "he probably won't have
to eat his pen."
</p>
<p> Senator Joseph Lieberman, a Connecticut Democrat who consults
closely with the White House on health care, said he was getting
an ominously fuzzy message. "If I'm getting any signals at all,"
he said, "it is in the direction of folding up the tent" for
this year. In Congress, he observed, "people who want to do
nothing and people who want to do too much are peeling off,"
leaving only a minority interested in modest steps and compromise.
One of those splitting off on the left was Representative Jim
McDermott, a Democrat from Washington State who favors a "single
payer" health system in which the government pays all medical
bills from tax revenue. He declared last week that he could
not support any incremental reforms, observing that Congress
is "getting into that political mode where you want to do something
just so that it looks like you've done something. That's often
when we create the worst policy."
</p>
<p> Meanwhile, Republican leader Dole, who last year endorsed Clinton's
call for universal coverage and then supported Chafee's efforts
for bipartisan accord, kept backing away from both men last
week. During his travels around the country in recent weeks,
Dole said, he has detected in the public mood that "health care
has sort of disappeared from the radar screen as a big issue."
Dole also cited the proximity of the October recess. "Every
time you look at health care in that context, it looks smaller
and smaller."
</p>
<p> Nonetheless, Senators Mitchell and Chafee this week will resume
their efforts to amend Chafee's bipartisan "mainstream" bill
in ways that might attract majority support. One of the bill's
most controversial provisions would reduce the federal-tax break
for many of those who obtain health insurance through their
employers. This tax subsidy costs the Treasury $74 billion a
year, fuels health-care inflation and disproportionately benefits
workers with the most generous health plans. Capping this tax
break is widely considered good policy but bad politics, and
is unlikely to win the approval of more than 40 Senators.
</p>
<p> Another troublesome section of the mainstream bill would limit
the ability of insurance companies to raise premiums on policyholders
as they age, fall ill and change jobs. That would force insurers
to raise premiums on the healthy and the young, who on average
earn far less than their elders. Because the bill does not mandate
that all Americans carry insurance, many of the young and healthy
would probably drop their coverage. That has been the experience
in New York State, which instituted a similar "community-rating"
system last year and found its pool of policyholders growing
older, sicker and more expensive to cover.
</p>
<p> For these and other reasons, even Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan,
whose Finance Committee gave birth to the mainstream bill, gives
it little chance of passage. Harold Ickes, the chief White House
strategist for health legislation, has warned Clinton that he
should avoid embracing the mainstream bill lest he be identified
with another failure. At the same time, Leon Panetta, the new
White House chief of staff and a veteran of Congress, warns
that the President must not write off the efforts of key lawmakers.
Upshot: Clinton is left to cheerlead in hoarse whispers from
the sidelines.
</p>
<p> Several less ambitious bills that attempt to reform health insurance
also risk making it worse. These include bills introduced by
Dole and Senator Bob Packwood, the Oregon Republican; by House
minority leader Bob Michel; and by a bipartisan group of House
members with the unwieldy label of Rowland-Bilirakis-Cooper-Grandy.
None stands much chance of passage.
</p>
<p> Critics of incremental reform explain that health care contrasts
sharply with most legislative issues because it does not easily
submit to the go-slow, split-the-difference culture of Congress.
Senator Patty Murray, the Washington State Democrat, compares
the process to "putting a 10-m.p.h. speed limit on ambulances--it's costly, and it's dangerous."
</p>
<p> Several liberal lawmakers are trying to frame an incremental
reform that would achieve universal health coverage for at least
one emotionally important constituency: children. Leading the
effort is Wofford, who would provide full government funding
to insure all children in families below the poverty line (now
$14,764 for a family of four) and would offer partial subsidies
sufficient to insure children in families that have incomes
perhaps four times more than the poverty level. "It probably
wouldn't cover that many more people," says an Administration
health expert, "but Congress and the President could say, `Hey,
we got a start on universal coverage and did some good for a
group that almost everybody wants to help.'"
</p>
<p> Wofford, whose come-from-behind Senate victory in 1991 first
identified health care as a hot campaign issue for Bill Clinton,
accepts that the public is not ready for major reform this year.
But he adds some fighting words. If Congress cannot agree on
at least some small step toward health reform this year, he
will sponsor a bill to disqualify lawmakers from the Federal
Employees Health Benefit Plan. "It's simply wrong," Wofford
argues, "for members of Congress to have health benefits paid
for by their employer--the taxpayers--when many of those
who actually pay the taxes have no such benefits themselves."
</p>
<p>QUESTION:
</p>
<p> Do you think the country's health-care system needs
a great deal of reform?
<table>
<tblhdr><cell><cell>April 1993<cell>Aug.-Sept. 1994
<row><cell type=a>Great deal<cell type=i>63%<cell type=i>51%
<row><cell>Only some<cell>34%<cell>38%
<row><cell>No reform at all<cell>3%<cell>9%
</table>
</p>
<p> Which one of the following is most responsible for the failure
to pass a comprehensive health-care reform plan?
<table>
<tblhdr><cell><cell>Aug.-Sept. 1994
<row><cell type=a>Opposition from Republicans in Congress<cell type=i>20%
<row><cell>A lack of leadership by the Clinton Administration<cell>19%
<row><cell>Lobbying against the reform by the health care industry<cell>18%
<row><cell>Business opposition to health-care reform<cell>16%
<row><cell>A lack of support from Democrats in Congress<cell>10%
</table>
</p>
<p> From a telephone poll of 800 adult Americans taken for
TIME/CNN on Aug. 31-Sept. 1 by Yankelovich Partners Inc. Sampling
error is plus or minus 3.5%. Not Sures omitted.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>