Medicare for All gets its very own hearing in the U.S. House of Representatives today, but congressional leaders are only beginning to come to grips with the true costs of the proposal — or, for that matter, the battle that lies ahead.
Most of the Democrats' proposals claim that they can reduce costs, but they cannot do so unless they take on two of the most sympathetic and powerful actors in the U.S. health care system: hospitals and physicians. Both of them are more likely to co-opt Medicare for All than to allow it to harm their interests.
To get a sense of their influence, consider that only about 21% of U.S. health care costs are attributable to drug and insurance companies. The bulk of the rest comes from providers, mostly hospitals and doctors' offices. And Medicare reimburses at a lower rate than private insurance.
(Related: We Can Handle Medicare for All: Aflac)
Medicare for All proposals, such as the one introduced by Sen. Bernie Sanders, would apply the lower Medicare reimbursement rate across the board. That would cut into what providers earn. Advocates of the plan might say that's the whole idea, or least part of it. Hospitals and physicians in the U.S. charge far more than their counterparts in the rest of the world, they rightly point out, for results that are frequently no better.
But it's worth examining why costs are so high, and whether a Medicare for All plan would do anything about them.