Richardson’s Health Care Plan (Revised)

After failing to gain either legislative or popular support for his ambitious, universal health care plan which would have relied heavily on government mandates, Governor Richardson has introduced a scaled-back health care reform proposal that will be considered in the upcoming special session.
The Governor’s plan would:
• Require all children through the age of 18 to have health care coverage from private or public sources. The bill contains no enforcement mechanism or penalty for parents who don’t secure coverage for their children.
• Appropriate $58 million to expand existing programs to reach an estimated 50,000 children who qualify for publicly funded coverage but don’t receive it. The additional spending would recur annually, Hyde said.
• Establish a new Health Care Benefits Administration to consolidate management of several existing public coverage programs, including state employee and public retiree insurance plans.
• Gradually limit premium increases insurance companies can charge small businesses from 20 percent today to 10 percent per year in five years.
• Require insurers to spend at least 85 percent of premiums on services and guarantee that anyone who needs insurance can get it regardless of health status.
• Establish privacy requirements for patients’ electronic medical records.
While this scaled-back proposal is a significant improvement over the Governor’s original if only because it is scaled back, legislators should still be skeptical as to whether the proposal, if passed, would result in any improvement in New Mexicans’ health care or uninsured rates.
Specifically, requiring that parents obtain health care for children through the age of 18 is bound to be ineffective as there is no enforcement mechanism, but this is actually a good thing. After all, responsible parents want their children to be covered, but not all parents are responsible and many others either can’t afford it or believe that putting food on the table and gas in their car to get to work is more important than health insurance for their children.
Spending $58 million to put more children who already qualify for government health care on government plans is also a poor option. Rather than spending $58 million every year for more welfare, how about giving parents an equivalent tax break to set up Health Savings Accounts for their children?
Regarding efforts to set up a Health Care Benefits Administration, limit premium increases, and set up arbitrary requirements for insurers, these are nothing more than means to further impose government control on the health care sector of New Mexico’s economy. New government agencies and micromanaging the insurance industry are not going to result in significant improvements in either the quality or availability of health care in this state.
The fact is that government policies are largely to blame for the current health care mess. Did you know that New Mexico charges the highest tax on insurance premiums in the nation (4.003%)? How about eliminating New Mexico’s gross receipts tax on deductibles and co-pays which are tax-exempt in almost all other states? This tax which in some places exceeds 8 percent in some areas of the state is applied to this ever-increasing area of health care expenses.
The aforementioned ideas are just a few ways in which the negative impact of current government policies could be mitigated. They would also be far more likely to succeed in expanding health care access to the greatest number of New Mexicans.
While the Governor should be applauded for scaling back his mandate-heavy original proposal, the Governor’s scaled-back proposal still moves us towards an increased government role in health care. Hopefully, legislators will again reject more government reliance and instead consider market-based reforms outlined above in the upcoming 2009 legislative session.