Are
There Really 47 Million Americans Who Can’t Afford Health Insurance?
by
Dom Armentano
by Dom Armentano
Recently
by Dom Armentano: Bailout
Baloney
An editorial in
the July-August 2009 AARP Bulletin repeats the same bromide
heard almost nightly on the MSM news: That there are currently 47
million Americans without health insurance. The AARP editorial goes
on to argue that this situation is disgraceful; that all Americans
should have "affordable health care choices"; and that in
terms of reform, "the time to act is now."
The sad tale
of the 47 million uninsured is, perhaps, the most emotionally persuasive
argument put forth for national health care reform. But is the alleged
number of uninsured reasonably accurate? Or is it, instead, a purposely
misleading statistic designed to advance a specific reform agenda?
The 47 million
uninsured number is generated by an annual U.S. Census Bureau report.
However, that report also states that the 47 million uninsured includes
roughly 10 million illegal aliens without health insurance. Thus,
if we subtract out the illegals, the number of uninsured American
citizens without health insurance declines by more than 20%...to
roughly 37 million.
But is it
accurate to assume that even 37 million Americans cannot afford
health insurance? Absolutely NOT. Even Hillary Clinton during her
presidential campaign once admitted that 25% of the uninsured could
afford health insurance but chose not to purchase it. The Census
Bureau reports that there are roughly 17 million people who make
more than $50,000 per year and who, for whatever reason, decide
not to carry health insurance.
In short, with
two reasonable adjustments, the number of Americans who cannot afford
health insurance has been reduced from 47 million to approximately
20 million.
But is the
20 million figure itself reasonably accurate? Probably not. Individuals
moving between jobs lose their (employer provided) health insurance
and when they do the Census Bureau counts them as "uninsured."
Technically true. Yet during normal times, roughly half of these
individuals will have re-acquired (in about 4 months) health insurance
coverage with a new employer.
Finally, there
are millions of adult Americans and children who have (nearly free)
access to medical care benefits through Medicaid and other government
programs who don't really need the direct cost of "insurance"
and who don’t carry any.
Thus, with
reasonable adjustments, there are in fact less than 10 million individuals
who are so-called "chronically uninsured." (The Kaiser
Family Foundation says the number could be as low as 8 million).
These are individuals who have been unemployed for over 2 years
and/or people from households that are too poor to afford non-employer
health insurance premiums and who, for whatever reason, have limited
access to taxpayer-supported health services.
So lets
grant that there are between 8 to 10 million Americans (total population:
307 million) who cannot afford health insurance and that this situation
may require a marginal public policy adjustment. (Most states mandate
expensive benefit coverage; curtailing those mandates would lower
the cost of health insurance.) But whether that situation requires
some massive, Washington D.C. health care reform with new
regulations and mandates on health care providers, insurance companies,
and drug manufacturers is entirely problematic.
Politicians
and interest groups, eager to remake your medical world over to
their liking, would do well to respect the Hippocratic oath administered
to physicians: First, do no harm.
July
11, 2009
Dom
Armentano [send him mail]
is Professor Emeritus at the University of Hartford (CT) and the
author of Antitrust
and Monopoly
(Independent Institute, 1998) and Antitrust:
The Case for Repeal
(Mises Institute, 1999). He has published articles, op/eds and reviews
in The New
York Times, Wall Street Journal, London Financial Times, Financial
Post, Hartford Courant, National Review, Antitrust Bulletin
and many other journals.
Copyright
© 2009 Dom Armentano
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