Financing Health Care Reform

There is little question about the need to reform America’s health care system. The country spent $2.2 trillion for health care last year, but a significant portion of that spending is likely to have provided little if any value to the well-being of patients. Health insurance costs have been rising more rapidly than workers’ wages, putting insurance increasingly out of reach for millions of people. Although much public attention has focused on expanding coverage for the uninsured, that goal is tied to our efforts to reform the delivery system and to establish a responsible financing system that is sustainable into the future.

There are two basic ways to finance a reformed health system: raise revenue or reduce health spending. We will undoubtedly do both. What matters is whether we take advantage of this moment in history to promote greater efficiency, greater consumer involvement, and smarter health purchasing--to achieve better health outcomes while living within a realistic budget constraint.

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Joseph Antos is the Wilson H. Taylor Scholar in Health Care and Retirement Policy at AEI.
About the Author

 

Joseph
Antos

  • Mr. Antos's research focuses on the economics of health policy—including Medicare and broader health system reform, health care financing, health insurance regulation, and the uninsured—and federal budget policy. He has written and spoken extensively on the Medicare drug benefit and has led a team of experienced independent actuaries and cost estimators in a study to evaluate various proposals to extend health coverage to the uninsured. His work on the country’s budget crisis includes a detailed plan to achieve fiscal stability and economic growth developed in conjunction with AEI colleagues.  


    Joseph Antos is also a commissioner of the Maryland Health Services Cost Review Commission and a health adviser to the Congressional Budget Office.  Before joining AEI, Mr. Antos was Assistant Director for Health and Human Resources at the Congressional Budget Office.




    Watch Mr. Antos in an interview with Bill Erwin of the Alliance for Health Reform on "Will Health Reform Reduce the Federal Deficit?"

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