Medicare for All Is a Money Saver
Need another reason to love Medicare for All? Bernie Sanders's plan is so much cheaper than the alternatives that passing it would make it easier to fund other social programs.
Most of the discussion surrounding the Mercatus Center report on Bernie Sanders’s Medicare-for-All plan has been about whether the score shows that Sanders’s plan can realistically save $2 trillion over the first ten years of implementation. The answer to that question is “yes it does show that,” but Mercatus has been hard at work spinning gullible media platforms to say otherwise.
But as important as it is to get that fact right, it’s also important to make two other points that people often get wrong about Medicare for All and this study.
First, even Mercatus’s modified version (black line) of Bernie’s plan (red line) where Mercatus assumes zero provider payment cuts are really not that much more expensive than the status quo. Under the status quo, Americans as a whole will spend 21.1 percent of GDP on health care between 2022 and 2031, while under the Mercatus version of Medicare for All, it’s 22.2 percent — and for that extra 1.1 points of GDP, you get 30 million more insured, the virtual elimination of out of pocket expenses, and universal dental, hearing, and vision coverage.
Second, because Medicare for All is cheaper than other strategies to achieve universal health care, opting for Medicare for All over those other strategies makes it easier to afford other important progressive priorities like paid leave and public childcare. This is a point a lot of liberal commentators misunderstand, including some prominent think tank experts.
The naive way to think about how much fiscal room the government has is to just look at the tax level. The US tax level is currently 26 percent of GDP while Denmark’s is 46 percent of GDP. So, under the naive take, the difference between those two numbers, twenty points of GDP, is basically the total conceivable budget for new government taxes. If you spend ten of those twenty points on Medicare for All taxes, then you only have ten more points left. But if you spend only two points on a complicated scheme of refundable tax credits, then you have eighteen points left. Or so the reasoning goes.
But this an entirely incorrect way to think about it. The amount of money available for non–health care spending is determined not by the tax level, but by the amount of money going into the health care sector. If you are spending twenty-five points of GDP into the health care sector, then those twenty-five points are unavailable to you regardless of how health care spending is financed (i.e., whether through Medicare-for-All taxes or private insurance premiums). Put differently: if your universal health care system relies upon individuals pumping in, say, $3 trillion of cash into the health care sector out of their own pockets, then that $3 trillion of cash is not available for you to tax for other purposes. It’s already been claimed by the health care sector.
What this means, then, is that the cheapest route to universal health care (in terms of national health expenditures) is always going to leave more fiscal space for spending on other public benefits than any other route, regardless of whether the cheapest route involves a bunch of government spending or very little. The centrists do not yet have a plan for how they are going to get to universal health care without Medicare for All. But you can be sure that, if such a plan relies upon the existence of a bunch of private insurers, then it will cost more than even the Mercatus version of Medicare for All (black line) above. And in that case, their unnecessarily expensive approach to health care will crowd out other social spending to a greater degree than Medicare for All will.