75%
Scenarios
Not
all scenarios are rosy.
Anonymous
As I read the news, I keep running across 75% scenarios.
·
France has raised its top income rate to
75%.
·
Delos Cosgrove, MD, CEO of the $5 billion Cleveland Clinic,
predicts government, which now pays for 50% of total health costs, may soon pay
for 75% costs.
·
Merritt Hawkins, the nation’s largest physician recruiting firm,
believes 75% of physicians will be employed by hospitals and large health care
organizations by 2020 and probably ooner.
What would health care look like if these 75%
scenarios came to pass?
1. If the income tax goes to 75% in the U.S., it would result in capital flight
from the U.S., as it has in France. But
where would the rich go? As matters stand in U.S. now, the effective U.S. top rate is 39.5%, but it
is more like 45% if you throw in other taxes, like the 3.8% Obamacare tax, new
Medicare taxes, the payroll tax, and other
hidden taxes. Keep in mind that many
blue states already effectively tax
income at 50%. But, given Americans’ dislike of high taxes and big government, the 75% rate is highly unlikely in the US. Still, on a smaller scale, capital flight is
already occurring in the U.S. – from high
tax Blue States – California, New York, the Midwest, the NE corridor- to Red
States – particularly those with no income tax – Florida, Texas, Tennessee (“Laffer
and Moore: The Red-State Path to Prosperity,” WSJ, March 27, 2013).
2. If and
when government pays for 75% of all health costs, there will likely be a massive migration
of patients and physicians out of the system to concierge and cash only
practices, to any setting that is free
of third party restrictions and paperwork, to self-funding by large and small
businesses, to health savings accounts
with high deductibles away from PPOs and
HMOs, to anything with lower premiums and more freedom of choice, to the
underground economy . It will not be pretty. It will be chaotic. But this is what happens in a country that prefers individualism to collectivism and the freedom to do what one wants in a nanny-free environment.
3. If
hospitals and large integrated health systems employ 75% of doctors, including physicians,
a colossal consolidation into larger and larger entities with capital, administrative,
analytical, and technological resources will take place. These huge entities will have enough wherewithal
to establish monopolies, to fend off
government, and to negotiate larger
payments from health plans Hospitals will charge higher fees for
physician services to offset losses from declining numbers of beds, dwindling Medicare
revenues, and losses from less-productive physician practices.
Physician productivity will drop about 30% as physicians become salaried
employees. Some of these entities will
take the form of accountable care organizations. Government antitrust actions will ensue, In
a worst case scenario, a physician
shortage will occur, as physicians drop out of workforce, work part-time, or seek non-clinical work,
and there are not enough nurse practitioners or physician assistants to take up the slack or fill the primary
care gap.
I hope none of these 75% scenarios
happens. I would not like to be labeled as “Doctor
Worst-Case Scenario.”
Tweet:
Worst-case scenarios: U.S. income tax rates climb to 75%, government pays for 75% of total care,
and hospitals employ 75% of doctors.
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