Health Care and the Myth of Self-Reliance

Nicole Huberfeld, Jessica Roberts
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Both pillars of the Affordable Care Act that are designed to facilitate universal coverage — the low-income tax subsidy and Medicaid expansion — have been subject to high-profile Supreme Court cases. While in King v. Burwell the Court saved the ACA’s low-income subsidy, in NFIB v. Sebelius the Court frustrated Medicaid expansion, at least temporarily. We argue that there is a deeper story about health care access for the poor. Drawing from the history of the American health care system, vulnerability theory, and demographic data, we demonstrate that all Americans lead subsidized lives and could find themselves quickly moving from the private to the public system. We contend that the apparent political preference for private, or “hidden,” government assistance over public, or “visible,” government assistance has its roots in the American myth of self-reliance. Our analysis debunks this myth and reveals that the line between hidden and visible government assistance fails both theoretically and empirically. We conclude that a single government program for the poor would be more economically and administratively efficient.
医疗保健和自力更生的神话
《平价医疗法案》旨在促进全民医保的两大支柱——低收入税收补贴和医疗补助计划的扩大——一直受到最高法院的高调审理。在金诉伯威尔案中,法院挽救了ACA的低收入补贴,在NFIB诉西贝利厄斯案中,法院至少暂时挫败了医疗补助计划的扩张。我们认为,穷人获得医疗保健有更深层次的原因。根据美国医疗保健系统的历史、脆弱性理论和人口统计数据,我们证明了所有美国人都过着有补贴的生活,他们可能会发现自己很快从私人医疗系统转移到公共医疗系统。我们认为,明显的政治倾向于私人或“隐藏的”政府援助,而不是公共或“可见的”政府援助,其根源在于美国人自力更生的神话。我们的分析揭穿了这个神话,并揭示了隐藏和可见的政府援助之间的界限在理论上和经验上都是失败的。我们的结论是,一个针对穷人的单一政府项目在经济和行政上更有效率。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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