Defunding or repealing the law is practically impossible,
but here’s how we can fix it.
It is now common knowledge that the bugs in the Obamacare
website have been embedded in the system from the start. For the past two
weeks, not only have many individuals found it impossible to access the website,
but they are often frozen in place once they pass through the initial portal.
The problems will just get worse. The current law requires extensive
communications between enrollees and their chosen insurance
carriers, as well as massive interaction with both federal and state
organizations. As a result, web traffic builds up behind bottlenecks and leads
to massive frustration. As I warned last May, watching
Obamacare unravel is a painful business.
The Bright Side of Bad News
Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen
Sebelius has tried to put a positive gloss on the messy situation with
the dubious observation that the system glitches are due to heavy consumer
demand. Her statement subtly implies that the nation’s alleged need for the
program is the cause of its momentary glitches. She claims that things are
“getting better by the day.” Not so. The government site was not built for
heavy traffic, nor was it tested before going live. It is no mean feat to try
to fix a balky computer system on the fly.
As a result of these problems, calls to delay the implementation of the individual mandate are now reaching a fever pitch, such as Peggy Noonan’s to delay the individual mandate a year. The bugs need to be worked out before ordinary people are slapped with fines for failing to enroll in the derelict system before the penalty deadline now set for March 31, 2014.
Thus far, the Obama Administration has been mum on the
sources and extent of the difficulties. But make no mistake about it: they
reflect the broader structural weaknesses of the program, which were hidden
from view by the disastrous launch. Nonetheless, the system’s basic design is
flawed, and its gaffes will become only more apparent as implementation moves
forward.
Republicans are howling to repeal and defund Obamacare. As a
policy matter, that is surely the correct move. But as a political matter, the
prompt repeal of Obamacare is just not going to happen over the uncompromising
opposition of a Democratic president and a Democratic Senate. So, if the first-best
solution is not possible, more modest fixes for Obamacare are in order until
Republicans start winning elections. Here are three areas of the law to change:
the employer mandate for employees who work 30-hours-per-week; the coverage
rules; and the medical loss ratio.
Part-Time Employment
As of January 1, 2014, Obamacare’s employer mandate kicks in
with respect to employees who work thirty or more hours per week for a single
employer. Just finding out who falls on which side of that line is no easy
task. Much employment is seasonable, which could make it difficult to classify
individual employees on one side of the line or the other without a close
examination of their working history, which then has to be updated on a
periodic basis.
But the larger difficulty is structural. As Andrew
Puzder recently argued in the Wall Street Journal, the closer we come
to implementation of the employer mandate, the stronger the pressure becomes
for employers to hire part-timers who unambiguously work less than 30 hours per
week. It will not happen in all cases. But in some significant fraction of
cases it will be cheaper for a firm to hire more workers on a part-time base
than fewer workers on a full time basis.
Alternatively, some employers will find it more efficient to
hire fewer high-skilled workers with overtime payments in order to minimize the
mandate’s burden. Both of these Obamacare-driven strategies are inefficient
because neither would be adopted in a tax-free world, with higher optimal
output.
The administration wanted to keep the hours exemption low in
order reduce the number of employers who would avoid the mandate. What they did
instead was to put the cart before the horse. In the effort to force-feed the
healthcare market, they managed to cast a major pall over a struggling labor
market. It is far better to expand labor markets in ways that create more
wealth instead of restricting them for the sake of a botched employer mandate.
Obamacare’s Coverage Rules
A second major problem with Obamacare is how it sets
healthcare rates in individual markets. The administration’s insistence that
these be called “exchanges” or “markets” belies their coercive and confused
nature. An open exchange is one that allows companies that meet certain minimum
standards of probity and financial responsibility to sell their goods or
services on terms and conditions that they choose to offer: think eBay. But
none of that is tolerated on the Obamacare exchanges, as all parties are
rigorously scripted to the kinds of services they can offer and the prices that
they can charge.
In this case, the first problem is that the set of minimum
benefits under the various plans is defined so generously that people will have
to pay for services that they would never chose to acquire in a voluntary
market. The clear implication is that the higher coverage generates social
losses, not social gains. The inclusion of exotic items (e.g. habilitative
care) not only raises the price of access, but it also makes it harder to get
sensible benchmark pricing in what was, until the advent of the ACA, a
non-existent market. Cutting back on these benefits should go a long way to
controlling some of the price issues that have surfaced with the initial
quotes, and bring healthcare costs in to greater alignment.
Under the current system, too many people make a beeline for
coverage in the hopes of receiving huge subsidies—subsidies large enough to
lure them away from private plans for which they pay market rates. That
migration undermines private insurance companies that currently serve these
people. It also requires cross-subsidies from healthier individuals to pick up
the slack built into the system. The required revenues will not come from direct
government payments, but only from other plan participants, namely younger
enrollees now forced to pay above-market rates to supply the subsidy—if they
chose to participate, which they often won’t.
This form of community rating has pronounced effects. Under
the ACA, the maximum allowable rate differential is three-fold between a young
person and a senior, but the market differential is about five-fold. Under
those circumstances, the young person is likely to resist even movie-star
exhortations to enroll in a plan that offers a net negative.
That tendency will increase because of the generous
accommodations Obamacare makes for applicants with preexisting conditions. Most
insurance plans design their enrollment and premium strategies to combat the
constant risk of adverse selection. People have private information about their
healthcare status, and thus are more likely to purchase healthcare at standard
group rates when aware of their own precarious healthcare position.
Most traditional plans use various devices to control the
risk of adverse selection. These include an individual disclosure, which allows
firms to raise prices or exclude customers. With group plans, it is commonplace
to require a minimum level of employee participation to prevent individual
opportunism. But Obamacare goes in the exact opposite direction and requires
insurers to enroll parties who know of their increased risk.
There is today a
huge public ground swell that insists that no one should be excluded
from healthcare on the grounds of their preexisting conditions. Nothing in the
short run can stop that dynamic. But it is at least possible to slow down its
effects. Thus, if open enrollment is allowed at any time, at least require all
persons who enroll to remain in the plan for a year so that the insurer can
earn back some of the money that it loses thanks to these strategic
enrollments.
There is a limit to the size and quantity of subsidies that
can be required. Pushing the balance back may well make access to the exchanges
a more attractive proposition for those who right now are likely to stay out. Even if some community rating system is sacrosanct, its size is not. Tapering
down on the program is a sensible mid-level strategy. The blunt truth is that
the Republicans have to win elections in order to force a fundamental overhaul.
The Medical Loss Ratio
As currently constituted, the ACA imposes extensive
restrictions on the way in which insurance companies spend their premium
dollars. In an ordinary business environment, the savvy firm is always making
trade-offs at the margin between its medical and administrative expenses.
Finding the right combination lets firms compete effectively in the
marketplace. There is, moreover, no single ratio that works for all firms: much
depends on the composition of its insured, the nature of its specialization,
the local regulatory environment, and many other factors.
The
medical loss ratio pays scant attention to these differences and
limits the amount of “administrative expenses” that can be spent to 20 percent
of individual plans and 15 percent of small group plans. Since 2012, firms that
do not meet their respective targets have been required to issue rebates to
their customers.
This boneheaded system is yet another example of how
Obamacare forces private insurance companies to incur costly administrative
expenses in order to deliver inferior services to their customers. This system
is based on the peculiar belief that government agencies know, in the abstract,
which expenses count as administrative, and how much they can be. It also
assumes that governments should force firms into predetermined paths even
though businesses, facing competitive pressures, have a far better grasp of how
their cost structures should operate. These requirements are a back-handed form
of price regulation, which should and could be eliminated right now without
gutting the core of Obamacare.
Getting from Here to There
Repealing Obamacare should be a high priority for the
Republicans if they can win national elections. But they can only get there if
they play the short-term game well. The usual three imperatives for healthcare
are to ensure access and quality while controlling price. I know of no top-down
administrative system that can begin to reach those three goals. The efforts to
force access and mandate quality are not only counterproductive, but they will
also drive up prices in ways that undermine both access and quality.
The only viable counterstrategy treats deregulation as the
first line of attack on the inefficiencies of the current system. Reduce costs
and avoid regulatory nightmares, and access to care will rise as rates decline
and quality of care improves. Once this is done, targeting subsidies at certain
individuals to allow them to purchase healthcare plans that the market offers,
such as the
Healthy Indiana plan, without taking over management of the system, will
result in greater access without compromising quality.
Playing hardball is a losing strategy. The Republicans will
never get their turn unless they use today’s computer glitches and enrollment
delays as a platform on which to propose modest market-enhancing reforms. This
might give the public the confidence in the GOP’s ability to work on more
substantial reforms down the road.
Richard A. Epstein, the Peter and Kirsten Bedford Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, is the Laurence A. Tisch Professor of Law, New York University Law School, and a senior lecturer at the University of Chicago.
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