Here's our quick takes from the Obama press conference earlier today on health reform:
1) Health care reform represented the anchor leg of Obama's prepared comments at his press briefing, following his comments first on the situation with the protests of the Iranian election and then the importance of an environment bill. We believe that's meaningful and that the White House is very serious about passing sweeping health care reform legislation, much more so than an environment bill.
2) Obama made it as clear as he ever has before: the bill must be deficit neutral or better over a decade. He will not sign a bill that isn't. What does that mean? The final bill will have to be scored at $1 trillion over 10 years. In other words, if a bill is scored as costing $1 trillion over 10 years and covers 75%-80% of the uninsured, we believe that's a bill that gets signed with a Rose Garden ceremony. The administration, or the next one, can work incrementally to cover the remaining 20%-25% of the uninsured.
3) If the only thing that stands between a health care reform bill and no health care reform bill is a public plan option, the President will sign a bill without a public plan. That was our read of his comments: "Ultimately, I may have a strong opinion but it's too early," to make a decision on the plan, Obama said.
4) Obama demonstrated a real and deep understanding of complex health care issues during the Q&A and we believe that is a positive for health care providers. Why? Because when it's time to make extremely tough decisions on reform, Obama will know exactly how deep the cuts that doctors, hospitals, insurers, and drug/medical product makers are sacrificing for reform and how policy decisions will be impacting the overall system.
5) Obama also showed real teeth when it came to the public plan debate. When asked a tough question about the potential for employers to drop their coverage and send people to a cheaper public plan and the inability of private insurers to compete with a government option, he put all of the onus on the private insurers. He essentially said that any private plan worth its salt should be able to compete ably with a public plan assuming 1) the rules are the same and 2) the public plan is not continually subsidized by taxpayer dollars--it has to be premiums paid by enrollees.
If you're interested in health care reform, you can follow our twitter feeds at http://twitter.com/Ramsey_Baghdadi and http://twitter.com/RPMReportMike.
No comments:
Post a Comment