Meet the New Harry and Louise
Vox’s attack on Bernie Sanders is sold as a policy critique. It’s actually
a dishonest exercise in managing the Democratic Party base.
by Seth Ackerman

https://www.jacobinmag.com/2016/01/vox-bernie-sanders-single-payer-ezra-klein-matt-yglesias/

Way back in the early months of the 2008 Democratic nomination battle, the
online hive of liberal wonkery was abuzz with controversy.

The health care plans announced by the Clinton and (especially) Obama
campaigns had come under fire for being short on specifics and vague about
key issues. The controversy was dominating the campaign news cycle, and now
liberal pundits were split.

One side (including Paul Krugman
<http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/07/opinion/07krugman.html> and the *New
Republic*’s Jonathan Cohn
<https://newrepublic.com/article/64506/wading-pool>) saw the sparse details
and general vagueness of Obama’s proposals (and, to a lesser extent,
Clinton’s) as a serious problem that reflected poorly on the candidates.

But one prominent wonk demurred — Matt Yglesias
<http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2007/05/is-there-a-historian-in-the-house/42539/>
:

Implicit in the pro-details side of things seems to be a kind of mandate
literalism about the American legislative process. The idea is that if a
candidate has a proposal on the table, runs on the proposal, gets attacked
on the proposal, and then wins the election anyway that this makes it much
more likely that congress will actually pass the proposal.

That makes a ton of logical sense. But is it historically accurate?

Yglesias was dubious, and his skepticism of the whole “pro-details”
position on health care soon became something of a leitmotif for him.

“In terms of specific details,” he wrote in another post, “neither campaign
has released much in the way of specific details. And what’s more, everyone
acknowledges that any specific details the campaigns might release will
likely be changed during the legislative process anyway. So what’s the
deal?”

For Yglesias, the really important thing about a candidate’s health care
plan was the broad principles that underpinned it, not its accumulation of
details. That was the lesson he took away when a DC policy magazine asked a
panel of experts to issue detailed scorecards for the various health care
plans of all the Democratic and Republican candidates.

Reviewing the scorecards, Yglesias concluded
<http://thinkprogress.org/yglesias/2007/11/01/187541/health_care_scores/>:

That the [two parties’] plans differ in these systematic ways probably
gives you a better idea of who to vote for than would any amount of peering
into the details of the plans. All of these proposals are vague in some key
respects, and nothing that’s proposed on the campaign trail is going to be
enacted as is by congress. But these plans show something about the values
and priorities of the different parties. Republicans, basically, are
looking to make sure that the federal budget contains as much headroom as
possible for tax cuts for high-income and high-wealth individuals while
minimizing financial burdens on large employers. Democrats, by contrast,
are looking to improve the quality and accessibility of American health
care.

The lesson for Yglesias that day (as on many other days) was that when it
came to principles, the Democrats had the better of the argument. As for
details, they weren’t so important.
The Acupuncture Crisis

It seems Yglesias has changed his mind.

Now that it’s Bernie Sanders who’s offering a major health care reform plan
<https://berniesanders.com/issues/medicare-for-all-2/>, Yglesias wants to
hear specifics
<http://www.vox.com/2016/1/18/10784774/bernie-sanders-serious>. In fact,
the sheer exhaustiveness of the specifics he wants to hear is pretty
extraordinary. “Is abortion covered? Is acupuncture? What if there are
shortages of medical equipment? What if a doctor wants to prescribe a
course of treatment that’s not supported by science? Sanders has nothing to
say about any of this.”

And it’s not just his mind that’s changed, it’s his tone. Gone is the usual
air of amused detachment; instead, he works himself up to an exasperated
pitch, like the policy writer’s version of a man yelling at his TV. “His
big, bold ideas — though a valuable contribution to the debate — just don’t
look very much like a governing agenda or even a basis for grinding general
election campaign.”

Warming to his theme, Yglesias spends a paragraph dilating on the
complexities of administering Britain’s National Health Service (a
different system than the one Sanders is proposing), and then after
reviewing those intricate issues, complains that “Sanders’s ‘plan’ doesn’t
cover any of this ground.” Worse, he says, Sanders’s “worldview” is unable
even to “accommodate the questions”; for the Senator, “the only relevant
issue is ‘whether we have the guts to stand up to the private insurance
companies and all of their money.’”

As Yglesias moves on to Sanders’s free college tuition plan, the hunger for
details becomes insatiable.

There are big questions here: What if states make this work by pushing more
costs into the room and board column? What if public university systems are
swamped with applicants now that they’re free? What if eliminating tuition
means students start taking longer to complete their degrees? What if the
underlying cost of providing a college education grows faster than the
volume of Wall Street trades? What about the quality of college education?

By the time Yglesias gets to Sanders’s Wall Street reform plan, the list of
missing details is too long even to itemize. He quotes the candidate: “It
is clear what you have to do. Bring back the 21st Century Glass-Steagall
legislation and break up these huge financial institutions.” To Yglesias,
this might as well be gibberish:

What does that mean? Well, Sanders has a bill called the Too Big To Fail
Too Big to Exist Act, which is a nice slogan. . . . The bill is only four
pages long, and what it does is direct the Financial Stability Oversight
Committee to compile a list of banks that are deemed “too big to fail” and
then break them up.

This just isn’t the way bank regulators think or work. There’s no such
thing as a bank that’s “too big” to fail. There are specific situations in
which the failures of certain financial institutions could be gravely
threatening to the stability of other financial institutions and set off a
chain reaction of bank failures that devastates the economy. Sanders’s
legislation offers regulators no guidance as to what criteria are supposed
to be used to identify institutions that are to be broken up, and says
nothing much about how the breakups are supposed to look or work.

It’s possible Yglesias hasn’t had an opportunity to read Sanders’s
four-page bill, though it is online
<http://www.sanders.senate.gov/download/tbtfleg?inline=file>. If he gets
around to it, he’ll find a paragraph that defines “too big to fail” as “any
entity whose failure, due to its size, exposure to counterparties,
liquidity position, interdependencies, role in critical markets, or other
characteristics or factors, would have a catastrophic effect on the
stability of either the financial system or the United States economy
without substantial Government assistance.”

He’ll find another part stating that Too Big To Fail “shall include, but is
not limited to, any United States bank holding companies that have been
identified as systemically important banks by the Financial Stability
Board.”

And if he really digs, he might stumble across the fact that the Federal
Reserve, the largest US bank regulator, has already
<http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/20150720a.htm>
promulgated
a rule “establishing the criteria for identifying a GSIB” (global
systemically important bank), and already compiled a list of such
institutions: eight giant banks, all household names. (Though obviously
there’s no talk of actually breaking them up.)

Now, is the idea of breaking up big banks — as a general principle — a good
idea in the first place? That might be something worth debating. Certainly
Sanders isn’t the only one who thinks so. “If some banks are thought to be
too big to fail,” Bank of England governor Mervyn King said
<http://www.theguardian.com/business/2009/jun/18/bank-of-england-mervyn-king>
in
a 2009 speech, “then, in the words of a distinguished American economist,
they are too big. It is not sensible to allow large banks to combine high
street retail banking with risky investment banking or funding strategies,
and then provide an implicit state guarantee against failure.”

Of course, the devil is in the details, as always. But this is an election
campaign, where the underlying “values and priorities” of a campaign plan
“[give] you a better idea of who to vote for than would any amount of
peering into the details of the plans.”

At least, according to Matt Yglesias.
A Switch in Time

But apparently one Sanders takedown in *Vox* wasn’t enough. Ezra Klein, the
website’s founder and a longtime health policy hand, felt the need to pitch
in too, posting aslashing evisceration
<http://www.vox.com/2016/1/17/10784528/bernie-sanders-single-payer-health-care>
of
Sanders’s single-payer health care proposal.

The flavor of Klein’s piece can be gleaned from its early paragraphs. It
was pretty brutal.

[T]his is a document that lets Sanders say he has a plan, but doesn’t
answer the most important questions about how his plan would work, or what
it would mean for most Americans. Sanders is detailed and specific in
response to the three main attacks Clinton has launched, but is vague or
unrealistic on virtually every other issue. The result is that he answers
Clinton’s criticisms while raising much more profound questions about his
own ideas.

Sanders promises his health-care system will cover pretty much everything
while costing the average American almost nothing, and he relies mainly on
vague “administrative” savings and massive taxes on the rich to make up the
difference. It’s everything critics fear a single-payer plan would be, and
it lacks the kind of engagement with the problems of single-payer health
systems necessary to win over skeptics.

Klein gives no quarter. Sanders’s plan is a “puppies-and-rainbows
approach,” a “huge, disruptive reform.” “This is what Republicans fear
liberals truly believe: that they can deliver expansive, unlimited benefits
to the vast majority of Americans by stacking increasingly implausible, and
economically harmful, taxes on the rich. Sanders is proving them right.”

As the paragraphs pile up, the conclusion becomes inescapable: health
reform is serious business — full of *hard choices* and *tough calls*. And
Sanders talks as if they just don’t exist.

This, obviously, is the age-old litany of the Important Beltway Pundit, a
rarified station that Klein has attained at a precocious stage of his
career. Yet before he became a Sunday morning-level pundit, Klein was
actually known as a bright young health reform expert, writing detailed
analyses and explainers on the finer points of policy.

In 2007, he published a broad-ranging and widely praised survey
<http://prospect.org/article/health-nations> of the world’s health care
systems in the *American Prospect* (Paul Krugman even put it on his class
syllabus
<http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/02/22/wws-594e-economics-of-the-welfare-state-class-3/>
at
Princeton) that did much to establish his early reputation as a policy
analyst.

And back then, health reform didn’t seem quite so *hard* or so *tough* to
Klein. Instead, that piece offered a far sunnier perspective. To see just
how sunny, it’s worth quoting it at length:

Medicine may be hard, but health insurance is simple. The rest of the
world’s industrialized nations have already figured it out, and done so
without leaving 45 million of their countrymen uninsured and 16 million or
so underinsured, and without letting costs spiral into the stratosphere and
severely threaten their national economies.

Even better, these successes are not secret, and the mechanisms not
unknown. Ask health researchers what should be done, and they will sigh and
suggest something akin to what France or Germany does. Ask them what they
think can be done, and their desperation to evade the opposition of the
insurance industry and the pharmaceutical industry and conservatives and
manufacturers and all the rest will leave them stammering out
buzzwords. . . .

So let us, in these pages, shut out the political world for a moment . . .
and ask, simply: What should be done? To help answer that question, we will
examine the best health-care systems in the world: those of Canada, France,
Great Britain, Germany, and the U.S. Veterans Health Administration (VHA).

How could Klein have felt such warmth back then for the single-payer
systems of Canada or France (let alone Britain, with its socialized NHS!),
while being so hostile to Bernie Sanders’s plan now, when the latter claims
to draw its inspiration specifically from the former?

Based on the *Vox* piece, it’s a mystery. Klein’s tone of confident
authority barely conceals a confused, self-contradictory, at times
laughably inaccurate jumble of charges that make little sense even on its
own terms.
Losing the Paperwork

Sanders’s cost-cutting plan is based on two premises about single-payer
systems: that they allow for a massive reduction in administrative costs,
and that they let the government bargain down the price of care.

Klein breezily dismisses the first source of cost reduction. He seemingly
doubts such a thing is even possible (the plan “relies mainly on vague
‘administrative’ savings”) and insists that, in any case, “the real way
single-payer systems save money isn’t through cutting administrative costs.”

Yet he seems to have been working from a different set of facts when he
wrote his 2007 tour of the world’s health systems.

Single-payer systems are also better at holding down administrative costs.
A 2003 study in the *New England Journal of Medicine* found that the United
States spends 345 percent more per capita on health administration than our
neighbors up north. This is largely because the Canadian system doesn’t
have to employ insurance salespeople, or billing specialists in every
doctor’s office, or underwriters. Physicians don’t have to negotiate
different prices with dozens of insurance plans or fight with insurers for
payment. Instead, they simply bill the government and are reimbursed.

When 2007-era Ezra Klein wrote this, he was not getting carried away by
youthful idealism; he was just reporting the consensus among experts.

For example, a frequent expert source for Klein over the years, Harvard
health economist David Cutler, who served as Barack Obama’s top health
policy advisor in the 2008 campaign, published new research
<http://pubs.aeaweb.org/doi/pdfplus/10.1257/jep.25.2.3> in 2011 comparing
administrative costs in the US and Canada, and found that while the
American system employs 2.2 administrative workers per physician, Canada
has only 1.1.

Cutler’s conclusion: “Perhaps the most troubling difference between the
U.S. and Canadian healthcare systems is the differential amount spent on
administration . . . There are few other areas of the U.S. economy where
waste is so apparent and the possibility of savings is so tangible.”

[image: $1000 deductible]

After inexplicably dismissing the possibility of administrative savings,
Klein moves on to Sanders’s other cost-cutting plank: government
bargaining. The core of Klein’s argument is laid out here:

The real way single-payer systems save money isn’t through cutting
administrative costs. It’s through cutting reimbursements to doctors,
hospitals, drug companies, and device companies. And Sanders gestures
towards this truth in his plan, saying that “the government will finally
have the ability to stand up to drug companies and negotiate fair prices
for the American people collectively.”

But to get those savings, the government needs to be willing to say no when
doctors, hospitals, drug companies, and device companies refuse to meet
their prices, and that means the government needs to be willing to say no
to people who want those treatments. If the government can’t do that — if
Sanders is going to stick to the spirit of “no more fighting with insurance
companies when they fail to pay for charges” — then it won’t be able to
control costs.

Klein’s whole argument is rooted in this rhetorical device — the concept of
“Saying No.” And that sounds like a very serious, very responsible thing to
say.

Yet, from top to bottom, the argument amounts to a spurious conflation of
two very distinct kinds of “Saying No” — joined to a series of factually
wrong claims about existing single-payer systems, and some baffling logic
thrown in for measure. Parts of it are not much more than double-talk.

Though dressed up to look like a policy critique of Sanders’s health care
plan, Klein’s piece, when stripped of it tangle of confusions, is just
another partisan polemic against the Sanders campaign itself.
How Single-Paper Really Saves Money

The single most important fact to know about health care costs is this: by
definition, they equal the *price* of health care times the *number* of
health care services delivered. So they can only be reduced if there’s
either a reduction in the average price of a service, or a drop in the
number of health care services provided (or some combination of the two).

[image: $2000 deductible]

Single-payer health systems vary greatly among one another. But their lower
costs relative to the US are, in pretty much all cases, overwhelmingly due
to lower prices per service — not fewer services per person.

That was the point of Princeton health economist Uwe Reinhardt’s
now-classic 2003 coauthored article in the specialist journal *Health
Affairs*. The title says it all
<http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/22/3/89.full.html>: “It’s the
Prices, Stupid: Why The United States Is So Different From Other Countries.”

Reinhardt and his coauthors analyzed a range of data from thirty OECD
countries — not just national health spending, but the actual numbers of
physicians, nurses, hospital beds, length of hospital stays, high-tech
machines, and cutting-edge procedures in each country, per capita.

Their conclusion, from the abstract:

The data show that the United States spends more on health care than any
other country. However, on most measures of health services use, the United
States is below the OECD median. These facts suggest that the difference in
spending is caused mostly by higher prices for health care goods and
services in the United States.

And although the authors themselves only analyzed aggregate statistics,
they also made use of an earlier study
<http://www.mckinsey.com/~/media/mckinsey/dotcom/insights%20and%20pubs/mgi/research/health%20care/health%20care%20productivity/mgi_health_care_productivity.ashx>
by
the McKinsey Institute (carried out under the direction of Kenneth Arrow
and Martin Bailey) that gathered particularly revealing micro-level data
from individual hospitals in the US, UK, and Germany.

Using those data, Arrow, Bailey, and their German partners were able to
break down the cost of individual hospital disease treatments (diabetes,
breast cancer, lung cancer, etc.) into separate input cost components
(physicians, pharmaceuticals, administration, etc.), and then divide each
input cost into its price component and quantity component.

The results are summarized in the charts below:

[image: MGI US UK Germany health care costs]

There’s a lot going on in these charts, but what they show can be
summarized in a few sentences.

US hospitals spent 66 percent more than those in Germany when treating the
same diseases. Yet those hospitals employed fewer physicians, dispensed
fewer prescriptions, and treated fewer acute cases per patient than the
German hospitals.

Rather than the result of Germany saying “no” to health *consumers*(i.e.
patients), its lower costs were entirely attributable to saying “no” to
*producers*, by paying them lower prices. The US-Germany cost difference
broke down as follows: lower physician wages (20 percent of the
difference), lower drug prices (5 percent), lower administrative expenses
(37 percent), and lower prices for acute care treatments (40 percent). (The
remainder, 27 percent, is an unexplained residual.)

(Do not be misled by the seemingly small percentage accounted for by drug
prices — the study looked only at hospital spending. More than70 percent of
drug purchases
<http://altarum.org/sites/default/files/uploaded-publication-files/Non-Retail%20Rx%20Data%20Brief.pdf>
take
place outside of hospitals, so national drug costs loom much larger as a
share of total national health spending — and thus of single-payer savings
— than their share of hospital costs alone would suggest.)

The facts were a bit different for the UK, but qualitatively the same.
Unlike Germany, it did use slightly fewer doctors and acute services than
the US. But its total spending was even lower than Germany’s (46 percent of
the US level, rather than 60 percent for Germany), and 87 percent of the
UK-US difference was still due to lower prices and overhead, rather than
input use.

So why are prices so much higher in the United States? Let’s let 2007-era
Ezra Klein explain it:

Canada’s is a single-payer, rather than a socialized, system. That means
the government is the primary purchaser of services, but the providers
themselves are private. (In a socialized system, the physicians, nurses,
and so forth are employed by the government.)

The virtue of both the single-payer and the socialized systems, as compared
with a largely private system, is that the government can wield its market
share to bargain down prices — which, in all of our model systems,
including the [Veterans Health Administration], it does.

A particularly high-profile example of how this works is Canadian drug
reimportation. The drugs being bought in Canada and smuggled over the
border by hordes of lawbreaking American seniors are the very same
pharmaceuticals, made in the very same factories, that we buy domestically.
The Canadian provinces, however, bargain down the prices (Medicare is
barred from doing the same) until we pay 60 percent more than they do.

And how does that square with what Klein is saying today? Well, let’s
recall his new argument, quoted above:

But to get those savings, the government needs to be willing to say no when
doctors, hospitals, drug companies, and device companies refuse to meet
their prices, and that means the government needs to be willing to say no
to people who want those treatments. If the government can’t do that — if
Sanders is going to stick to the spirit of “no more fighting with insurance
companies when they fail to pay for charges” — then it won’t be able to
control costs.

This is the crucial point where Klein subtly conflates two very different
kinds of “saying no”: the use of government bargaining power to say “no” to
producers, by insisting on lower prices than the market would otherwise
bear; and the government’s saying “no” to patients, by declining to pay (or
fully pay) for services.

Let’s walk through how these two kinds of “saying no” play out in a
particular medical example. I’ll use France — “the world’s best health care
system,” according to Klein in his 2007 survey — as the comparison case.

The bestselling blockbuster drug on the US market is Humira
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adalimumab>, an anti-inflammatory biologic
manufactured by Abbott Laboratories and approved by the FDA in 2008. Humira
is classified as a “fourth-tier drug” (a cutting-edge specialty drug); it’s
used for inflammatory conditions like rheumatoid arthritis and Crohn’s
disease. It goes without saying that these can be awful and stressful
illnesses to live with.

Currently the US retail price of Humira <http://www.goodrx.com/humira> (2
syringes of 40mg/0.8ml) is around $3,500. That’s how much you’ll have to
pay for the drug if you don’t have insurance. Good luck.

*[All employer health plan data in this section is from the Kaiser
Foundation’s 2015 Employer Health Benefits Survey
<http://kff.org/health-costs/report/2015-employer-health-benefits-survey/>*
*.]*

But what if you do have insurance? (And remember, 27 million will still be
left uninsured
<https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/attachments/43900-2015-03-ACAtables.pdf>
when
Obamacare is fully implemented.) Well, you might be among the 15 percent of
workers with employer-provided insurance whose plans nevertheless don’t
cover specialty drugs at all. If so, again, you’re out of luck.

Or you might be one of the 34 percent of employer-covered workers who face
“co-insurance” for fourth-tier drugs, which means you’ll have to pay a
certain percentage of the drug’s cost. The average co-insurance rate for
these workers is 32 percent. So, absent any overriding plan provisions, the
Humira would cost you $1,120.

Then there are the 40 percent of covered workers whose plans charge
co-payments for fourth-tier drugs, rather than co-insurance — a fixed
dollar amount, rather than a percentage of the cost. The good news here is
that the average copayment is $93. (Though, of course, some plans have much
higher copayments.) That doesn’t sound so bad, right?

Don’t get too excited, though. After all, you might be one of the 12
percent with a separate prescription drug deductible, which means you have
to foot the entire bill until you reach a certain threshold. The average
drug deductible is $231 per year — but, again, your mileage may vary
considerably. And although your insurance will kick in once you’ve paid
that much, in almost all cases you’ll still have to cough up co-payments or
co-insurance.

And don’t forget, you’re also paying premiums every month — $521 for single
coverage on average. That’s more than 20 percent of the average wage for
single, childless workers with employer insurance.

And that’s not all. Almost half of employer plans that cover specialty
drugs employ a variety of additional special strategies for “saying no”
when it comes to fourth-tier medicines. Some have an additional
cost-sharing tier for these drugs. Others impose “tight limits on the
number of units administered at a single time,” or mandate “step
therapies,” where they make you take cheaper treatments before they’ll pay
for the expensive drug  — even if your doctor is sure it’s the best one for
you.

Then there’s the infinite variety of “utilization management programs” that
appear the instant you request such drugs: special surveillance regimes
that find creative and innovative ways of making sure you don’t splurge too
much on your life-saving medicine. Often these make people’s lives a living
hell.

That, in a nutshell, is how we in America say “no.”
The Big “No”

Now let me walk through the same scenario as it would play out in France.

When the French government says “no,” it says so first and foremost to
Abbott Laboratories.

The French equivalent of the “retail” drug price is called the prix public,
or public price — the sum that Abbott is actually paid for the drug, plus
sales tax. The public price of Humira in France (same dose, same strength)
is not $3,500 (as it is here) but €940.90
<http://applis-tst-ext.ansm.sante.fr/php/bdm/extrait.php?specid=62235902#>
 ($1,028).

Why the difference? Here’s an explainer
<http://allopharmacie.fr/prix-medicaments> from the website of a French
online pharmacy directory:

The price of medications covered by national insurance is not a free-market
price, it is set partly by the Economic Committee for Medical Products
<http://social-sante.gouv.fr/ministere/acteurs/instances-rattachees/article/ceps-comite-economique-des-produits-de-sante>(ECMP),
after negotiations with the manufacturing pharmaceutical laboratory. In
case of disagreement, the ECMP, which is a government body, has the final
say.

In reality, though, no one in France pays even $1,028. National insurance
covers, at minimum, 65 percent
<http://applis-tst-ext.ansm.sante.fr/php/bdm/extrait.php?specid=62235902#> of
the public price. Thus, the most a French patient would pay for Humira is
$360.

Now, that’s still a lot of money for a person of modest means. But we’re
not done yet. Patients who need drugs to treat serious, chronic illnesses
like diabetes, hypertension, or cancer don’t have to pay a thing. A full
6.8 percent of the French population fall into this category
<https://kaiserfamilyfoundation.files.wordpress.com/2013/01/7852.pdf>,
and another 1.7 percent are exempted for other reasons (newborns, pregnant
women, the disabled, nursing home residents, etc.).

And, as it happens, rheumatoid arthritis and Crohn’s disease, two of the
main chronic conditions Humira is used to treat, appear
<http://www.ameli.fr/professionnels-de-sante/medecins/exercer-au-quotidien/les-affections-de-longue-duree/qu-est-ce-qu-une-affection-de-longue-duree/les-ald-exonerantes.php>
on
the list of diseases that qualify for an exemption.

So let’s apply Klein’s “saying no” formula to this example. Suppose you are
French, and you take Humira. But you’re not one of the people who qualify
for any exemptions. (Though I suspect there are not, in fact, many such
patients when it comes to this particular drug.)

In other words, you’re one of the people the French government *is*saying
“no” to. Yours is the “no” that Klein is keen to stress.

But the other “no” — the *much more significant* “no” — is the ultimatum
the French government already issued to Abbott Laboratories long before
you, the patient, was ever prescribed the drug.

How much bigger is this “no”?

The “no” imposed on Abbott saved French taxpayers about $2,500 per Humira
prescription – the difference between the “market price” (i.e. the US
retail price) and the price fixed by the French Health Ministry. By
comparison, the “no” handed down to you, the patient, requiring you pay 35
percent, saved taxpayers only an additional $360.

By this (admittedly partial) reckoning, more than 87 percent of the
taxpayer savings generated by France’s “Saying No Apparatus” (as it were)
came out of the pockets of Abbott’s shareholders. Only 13 percent came out
of the patient’s.

Yet Klein’s article systematically obscures the distinction between the
two, while making it seem that Sanders’s plan, out of some kind of populist
irresponsibility, chose to forego the main sources of real-world
single-payer cost containment. In fact, the reverse is true: it was Klein
who was doing that.

And this logic is by no means limited to the example of pharmaceuticals.
Every US health-provider industry is riddled with such rents, which get
squeezed out in single-payer systems. Consider that the median annual wage
<http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm> for a US dentist is $150,000,
even though the median electrical engineer makes less than $90,000
<http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm>. Why in the world should that
be? In Britain, a dentist at the midpoint of the NHS pay scale makes $92,000
<http://www.nhsemployers.org/~/media/Employers/Documents/Pay%20and%20reward/Pay%20and%20Conditions%20Circular%20MD%2012015.pdf>
.

But I haven’t even gotten to the weakest parts of Klein’s piece. Let me
briefly note a few.

He claims that “Sanders’s effort to fund a universal health care system so
heavily on the backs of the wealthy would be unprecedented,” and contrasts
the candidate’s approach with that of European countries, which “tend to
pay for their health care systems through more broad-based, economically
efficient taxes like VATs.”

But he offers no evidence for this. In fact, 87 percent of the funding for
Sanders’s plan comes from broad-based income and payroll taxes, only 13
percent from taxes targeting the wealthy. Most European countries fund
their systems through general tax revenues, which, likewise, mix broad
taxes like the VAT with progressive income and wealth taxes. Klein clearly
made no effort to check if his claim was true.

At one point
<http://www.vox.com/2016/1/17/10784528/bernie-sanders-single-payer-health-care>,
Klein tries to see how far he can get by simply redefining the term
“single-payer”:

Technically, a single-payer system is a system with, well, a single payer.
Private insurers are outlawed — otherwise, it would be a multi-payer
system. But the term is often used more loosely than that, and many systems
that get mentioned during discussions of single-payer, like the French
system, include various kinds of supplementary, private insurance that
people generally purchase.

That line could have used a fact-checker. In fact, there are no national
single-payer systems that outlaw private insurance, for better or worse.
(Or at least none among the usual “model” systems — or any of the countries
profiled in last year’s Commonwealth Fund survey
<http://www.commonwealthfund.org/~/media/files/publications/fund-report/2015/jan/1802_mossialos_intl_profiles_2014_v7.pdf>.)
In Canada, around 70 percent have private insurance. In Denmark’s
socialized system, 40 percent do.

In fact, no health care system in the world, or at least the rich world, is
actually “single-payer” on Klein’s definition — they’re all “multi-payer
systems.” In Canada, 29 percent of health spending comes from
<https://data.oecd.org/healthres/health-spending.htm>private sources. In
Sweden, the number is 16 percent. Ironically, the system with the lowest
share of privately sourced spending — that of the Netherlands (12 percent)
— mainly channels funds through private insurers. Nobody has ever thought
of it as a single-payer system.

But perhaps the biggest elephant in the room for Klein’s argument has
Hillary Clinton’s name on it. After all, a centerpiece of the health care
plan <https://www.hillaryclinton.com/issues/social-security-and-medicare/>
she’s
now touting is a promise to repeal the law that forbids Medicare from
negotiating drug prices with manufacturers. She claims that under her plan,
Medicare will “use its leverage with more than 40 million enrollees to
negotiate and drive down drug and biologic prices for seniors and others in
the program.”

But wait — according to Klein, isn’t such bargaining only supposed to work
if the government is willing to “say no”? To drop coverage for drugs whose
manufacturers refuse to meet the government’s price?

Which drugs will Hillary drop from Medicare? Which seniors will lose
coverage? Which diseases will go untreated? What about acupuncture? What
about death panels? Surely this can’t be a serious plan either, on Klein’s
analysis.
Lessons From Bevan

There is, of course, room for reasonable debate about Bernie Sanders’s
health care plan. It’s only eight pages long — just like the document Obama
released in 2007. It explains how it’s paid for, but offers no detailed
accounting of how it arrived at its numbers. And it had to make specific
projections about cost containment without much hard data to go on.

It also doesn’t spell out which categories of spending, if any, would still
be privately financed, though  even the most socialized systems, for better
or worse, fund their budgets with a small but significant fraction of
private spending. It can fairly be said that the plan glosses over the most
controversial issues that inevitably arise in any single-payer system.

In other words, Bernie Sanders released a campaign document, not a
blue-ribbon report from a panel of experts.

We might recall the experience of Aneurin Bevan
<http://www.britannica.com/biography/Aneurin-Bevan>, the father of
Britain’s NHS and hero of the Labour left. Despite Britain’s bankruptcy
after the war, he managed to push through his dearly held vision of free
care at the point of service — though doing so required an arduous standoff
with the nation’s doctors groups, of whom he famously said he had “stuffed
their mouths with gold.”

In 1951, he resigned from the Labour government in protest: he couldn’t
abide new prescription fees for dentistry and eyeglasses. That would be
only the first of many compromises of the NHS over the years. Nevertheless,
seven decades later, the NHS is still there and still beloved.
Base Management

Let’s return to the great Obama-Clinton health-wonk war of 2007. As Matt
Yglesias was dismissing demands for specifics, many other health policy
pundits were expressing serious reservations about Obama’s proposal, which
seemed to glide breezily past the most knotty issues involved in setting up
an insurance-exchange-based system.

One of those pundits was Ezra Klein.

Recall that the plan Obama campaigned on included no individual mandate to
buy insurance — even though policy experts all agreed that, without it, a
disastrous actuarial death spiral would ensue, given the subsidies and
insurance regulations that formed the plan’s centerpieces.

But Obama didn’t just irresponsibly exclude a mandate from his plan. He
then went on to bait Hillary Clinton in the primaries about the mandate
that she (“responsibly”) had included in her own plan — scaring voters with
talk of the government “forcing you to buy insurance” and “penalizing you”
if you didn’t. All of which, of course, turned out to be central features
of the Affordable Care Act he later signed.

This was disturbing to many liberal pundits. A disgusted Paul Krugman
condemned <http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/30/opinion/30krugman.html?_r=0>
Obama’s
“cheap shots” and “mudslinging.”

Ezra Klein basically agreed. He ran a stinging critique
<http://prospect.org/article/lack-audacity-0> of Obama’s health plan
in the *American
Prospect*, titled “A Lack of Audacity,” that lamented “a politician who
still hasn’t quite fulfilled the promise of his appeal.”

Klein was especially blunt about Obama’s disingenuousness in calling his
plan universal when it clearly was anything but (due to the absence of a
mandate). “There is perhaps no more surprising fact about Obama’s plan than
that it is not universal,” Klein wrote. “It is certainly sold as if it is.
In his speech unveiling the proposal, Obama bragged that, ‘[m]y plan begins
by covering every American.’ But it doesn’t. To say otherwise is rhetorical
overreach, the appropriation of a popular and broadly-supported goal
without an attendant mechanism for achieving it.”

Yet despite all this, Klein made it perfectly clear that this little
quarrel was all in the family. Obama’s plan wasn’t irredeemable, any more
than the candidate himself. Klein took care to make that plain throughout:
“Make no mistake: There is much to praise in the plan. . . . it’s a
promising concept. . . . If passed, our polity would be better, our people
would be healthier, and our finances would be more secure. . . . All the
ingredients are in place for this to be a great plan. . . . [T]here is time
yet. And he is so very close.”

Compare that with Klein’s take-no-prisoners trashing of Sanders’s plan
today, and its total absence of such saving words.

I think these contradictions are symptoms of the larger tremors now
vibrating through the Democratic Party as it tries, haltingly, to adjust to
the new world of polarized, ideologically sorted parties — a world where
“base mobilization” has replaced
<http://ppq.sagepub.com/content/early/2015/09/28/1354068815605676.abstract>
“swing
voter persuasion” as the only viable strategy to win elections.

The problem is that whipping up the base always holds an element of risk
<http://press.princeton.edu/titles/5872.html>: once you start to whip them
up, they might actually believe what you’re saying.

Again, recall how the 2008 primaries unfolded. No one expected “universal
coverage” to become the central issue in the Democratic race. It happened
almost by accident. One day, John Edwards, an underdog candidate grasping
for support wherever he could find it, announced a reform plan that he
promised could one day “lead to” single-payer. That electrified the small
but fervent corps of single-payer activists within the primary electorate,
forcing <https://newrepublic.com/article/39592/why-john-edwards-won> Obama
and Clinton to come up with their own plans.

Obama, in turn, claimed
<http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2009/jul/16/barack-obama/obama-statements-single-payer-have-changed-bit/>
that
his plan, too, could lead to single-payer — that, in fact, he had always
believed in single-payer in principle. When the details of Obama’s plan
were finally released, Klein (then a single-payer fan) actually cited
<http://prospect.org/article/lack-audacity-0> the absence of “a public
insurance option capable of serving as the seed of single-payer” as one of
its major shortcomings.

All this tantalizing rhetoric about single-payer was certainly helpful in
motivating the base to turn out that November. And then, when the
congressional sausage machine got going, it was invaluable in getting the
base to swallow a series of increasingly unpalatable compromises — until
finally the bait itself was tossed away
<http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/29/6/1117.full> and the public
option declared dead.

The predicament the party finds itself in now, judging by the new poll
numbers out of Iowa, is that it faces a base that took it at its word. And
now sites like *Vox* — key actors in what might be called the party’s “base
management system” — are forced to spring into action to patch things up.
But it’s not easy to hold up both halves of that maxim, enunciated by
famous liberal Immanuel Kant, regarding the proper attitude of a subject
toward his sovereign: criticize, but obey
<http://www.columbia.edu/acis/ets/CCREAD/etscc/kant.html>.

Right now, the system may look a little unsteady. And maybe it is, we’ll
see. Still, if I were the base — the liberal base, the progressive base,
the radical base — I wouldn’t get too complacent.
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