OpEd Contributor

[Print]  [Email]        

Obamacare failed in Europe

By: Guillaume Vuillemey and Philip Stevens
OpEd Contributors
June 30, 2009

President Barack Obama's proposed "public insurance option" for universal health coverage seems logical: A large public insurance fund will provide quality coverage for the uninsured and force competing insurers to lower costs. In practice, though, one needs only look at what decades of government health care have done to ramp up the financial and quality problems endured by Britain and France.

The Obama plan is supposed to make health insurance more competitive. But heavy subsidies will give it a big advantage, pulling an estimated 118.5 million people from private insurers to the public system. This government-subsidized system will eventually dominate the market in a way that would overrule competition.

This is precisely what happened in Britain. The state provides most health care, via the National Health Service. Patients have almost no say over which physician, surgeon or hospital they can use, while professionals have to conform to government plans and targets.

After its birth in 1948, planners soon found that "free" health care multiplied demand. NHS founder Lord Beveridge predicted free health care would cut spending as health improved.

The opposite was true. Between 1949 and 1979, it tripled in real terms. The service now costs twice as much as it did 10 years ago, with productivity down 4.5 percent.

One way government tries to limit demand is to decree which new drugs can be prescribed. Many drugs, widely available in America and continental Europe, are denied to British patients.

State mismanagement has also created waiting lines for hospitals, on average causing 8.6 weeks of waiting. Once inside, budgetary cutbacks on cleaning and maintenance mean higher rates of an antibiotic-resistant variety of staph infection. This "superbug" has turned even routine surgery into a lottery of death.

Britain may be an extreme example. Many point to France as a better example of public insurance delivering high-quality, equitable care. While it's true that French patients do enjoy better care and shorter waits than the British, this is due to a far greater reliance on independent health care and greater freedom from government for doctors and patients.

Yet this plus side is expensive. The French government is trying to control costs by increasing regulation of the private sector, meaning it will soon become more similar to Britain.

In France, there are already "medical deserts," particularly in the suburbs and countryside. In some places, patients wait more than six months to see an ophthalmologist.

In 2004, 286 of the country's top hospital doctors signed a petition bemoaning the shortage of doctors and nurses and increases in waiting lists. The petition read, "In casualty units, sick people have to wait for hours, sometimes even days, on gurneys, because there are no beds."

Yet France hasn't saved money. Despite regular cost-cutting announcements, the books haven't sustainably balanced since the system started in 1945. Obama, who recently agreed with health professionals to reduce the annual growth rate of health spending by 1.5 percentage points, should take note.

America can certainly draw lessons from overseas about saving money on health care. But in the cases of France and Britain, these lessons are in what not to do. These countries show that nationalizing care damages care.

 

Guillaume Vuillemey is a researcher at France's Institut Economique Molinari, and Philip Stevens is a researcher at Britain's International Policy Network.




beltway confidential

In response to the attention we gave him for his old column on how Washington has "anemic winters" because of global warming, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. tells NRO's Robert...

By a vote of 52 to 33, the Obama administration nominee to the National Labor Relations Board, Craig Becker, just failed to get the 60 votes needed for his nomination to proceed...

The highest form of flattery! Robert, declare yourself! (ap photo) Beltway Confidential knows a crush when she sees one. How else to explain the relentless mocking and...

You're beautiful, Chuck Todd. I mean that. (ap photo) On a day when many White House reporters (ahem) stayed away from the White House for snow or early-deadline...






To view this site, you need to have Flash Player 8.0 or later installed. Click here to get the latest Flash player.


Most Popular Headlines





 


 



 

Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Lynn

Jun 30, 2009

Excellent article, and universal health care advocates say we already are spending the money, it just has to be reallocated. However, allowing the government to do it is looking very scary.

 

rob

Jul 1, 2009

The bottom line is always the same. If you subsidize it you get more of it. As PJ O'Rourke famously observed, "If you think healthcare is expensive now, just wait until it's free." He was right, as the British experience reveals.

 

ADam

Jul 2, 2009

Seems like the blind leading the helpless... what can be done to derail the Obama Health Care plan?

 

Frank Griffin

Jul 2, 2009

Every other country in the world has failed at this but Obama thinks he is special so it will somehow work for him. Also why redo the entire system to fix a problem that only involves 10% of the population where many of them are illegal aliens even and should not be covered.

 

Joe

Jul 2, 2009

Canada was not mentioned. A very large proportion of Canadians looking for better and timely Health Care come here. We don't have to cross the pond for a good example of Health Care gone bad. Additionally, my sister lives in Italy and travels here for any major health issue.

 

Jon, London

Jul 2, 2009

This article declines to mention an important point - the British healthcare system costs less than a third of the US system (when comparing proportion of GDP spent on healthcare) even including those of us who buy top up private medical insurance to ensure high quality treatment. Plus we have genuine universal coverage. I would suggest that the German or Scandanavian solutions would allow America to enjoy first class medical care at arround half the current price. Surely this would be exactly the sort of economic stimulus required right now.

 

Baculus

Jul 2, 2009

Gee, good idea -- let's keep our overpriced system which does not even rank in the top-ten for overall quality! The British nationalized DHS system is not the same as the system proposed by the Obama administration, and this article is an example of the fear-mongering we've always hear from the Right regarding health care reform. A better example would be the German system, which provides a government/private hybrid, which is an old (dating from the 19th century) system, which provides good care for the citizenry. We currently do NOT have choice in this country if a person cannot afford health care or if their insurer refuses to pay for treatment. The problem is that Republicans have little to offer in return, and, if it was up to them, using fear-mongering tactics, we would continue on our same, present-day course.

 

Margaret

Jul 2, 2009

As someone who lives in the UK and uses the NHS I don't recognise it from this article! It's not true that people don't have any choice over who they see or where they are treated. In addition I would be amazed if I now had to wait 8.6 weeks for treatment. Waits in A&E (Casualty) are now required to be less than 4 hours. I know if I am ill I don't have to worry about having money to pay the doctor or the hospital, and as has been pointed our expenditure on health is far less in UK compared to US when GDP is taken into account.

 

Jul 3, 2009

What a bunch of idiots. I know what let's do, let's do the same thing other countries have failed at and we will do it better and fail even faster.

 

mell

Jul 4, 2009

All of this is about the Democratic Party handing out free goodies for votes. Lets list- Free food- food stamps Free daycare- Head Start Free housing- Section 8 In MA they even have free cell phones and cars Gotta keep the "war" on poverty alive by keeping the people poor. Vote Democrat!!!!!!!!!

 

lou

Jul 5, 2009

Hey Rob, the bottom line is Obama doesn't care about healthcare at all...it's just about RUNNING EVERY ASPECT of our lives...everyone's running around trying to figure this guy out - all you have to do is READ Rules for Radicals and save yourselves some "brain energy". It's him in a nutshell! Yeah, real sad for us non-kool-aid drinkers...

 


Post a comment


Email:
(This will not be displayed or shared. Privacy Policy)

Your Name:

Comment:




Local

Another snowball fight planned for Dupont Circle

The Official Dupont Circle Snowball Fight facebook fanpage has over 6,000 fans now, and it looks as if snowed in DC'ers will return for another battle. Full story

Politics

GOP winning war over Miranda rights for terrorists

Even as the administration defends its decision to grant accused Detroit bomber Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab the right to remain silent, the president himself is hinting that things might be done differently in the future. Full story

Local

D.C. region braces for up to 20 more inches of snow

The National Weather Service has the entire D.C. metro area, from Prince William County north, under a winter storm warning for 10 to 20 inches of snow. Forecasters have had their eyes on this storm for days, but the projected snow totals were bumped up late Monday. Full story