Analysts address HellerÕs objectionsWASHINGTON Since returning to Nevada after the House vote on health care reform, Republican Rep. Dean Heller Dean Heller (born May 10, 1960) is the Representative for the state's Nevada's 2nd Congressional District. He also was the state's Secretary of State. Biography has laid out one of his objections to the bill call it the iPod argument. Heller opposes the legislations mandate that all Americans carry health insurance. Some people may want to buy health care, Heller said, others might want to buy an iPod. It should be their choice. I think all Americans ought to have access to health care, Heller told Sun columnist Jon Ralston on the Face to Face With Jon Ralston TV program Tuesday. They ought to choose whether or not they want access, Heller continued. There are Americans out there who would choose, if theyre going to choose between health care and, say, an iPod theyll choose an iPod over their health care. I dont know anywhere in the Constitution where it requires a citizen here in this country to have health care. Hellers argument touches on economic and constitutional questions raised by proposed health care reform. First, the economic front. Everyone loves free markets, except when markets fail, which is partly the situation today as health care premiums rise beyond what families can afford. One reason health care premiums are high is something economists call externalities, unexpected costs or benefits that are not included in the price of a thing. Externalities can be positive your neighbors unexpectedly paint their home, boosting property values on the entire block. Or they can be negative a factory spews pollution into the environment before it packs up and moves on. In health care, the uninsured create negative externalities. Their emergency room visits and poor health later in life are hidden costs that jack up the price of health care for everyone else, explained Mark Thoma, an economist at the University of Oregon The University of Oregon is a public university located in Eugene, Oregon. The university was founded in 1876, graduating its first class two years later. The University of Oregon is one of 60 members of the Association of American Universities. . Nationwide, families pay an extra $1,100 annually for health care premiums to cover the emergency room bills of the uninsured, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. a study by Families USA Families USA is an American non-profit consumer health-care advocacy organization. It was founded by attorney Ron Pollack, its executive director. Pollack was Dean of Antioch School of Law, and argued cases involving food aid for low-income Americans before the Supreme Court. , a national organization supporting health care reform. Economists tend to believe that if all Americans are required to carry health insurance, the way drivers are required in many states to carry auto insurance, costs will be spread more equitably across the system. Its a way to get people to pay their fair share, Thoma said. As a society weve decided were not going to let people die because of a lack of health care, he said, referring to the 1986 law signed by former President Ronald Reagan that prohibits hospitals from turning away emergency room patients. But if people arent required to take responsibility for their own care, everyone else foots the bill. Your congressman would end up paying the health care costs of the neighbor, and it may be even more costly to do it that way, Thoma said. The health care lobby has embraced the individual mandate because it will funnel as many as 30 million uninsured Americans into health care plans, a huge increase in new customers. Both the House and Senate bills provide subsidies to help Americans buy insurance. But insurers also say the only way they can guarantee coverage for all regardless of preexisting pre·ex·ist or pre-ex·ist v. pre·ex·ist·ed, pre·ex·ist·ing, pre·ex·ists v.tr. To exist before (something); precede: Dinosaurs preexisted humans. v.intr. conditions or age is to broaden the risk pool to include those who are less risky. The only way the market reforms work is if everybody participates, said Robert Zirkelbach, spokesman for Americas Health Insurance Plans, the lobby for the nations 1,300 insurance companies. This leads to another economic theory the lemons problem Lemons problem Named after 2001 Nobel Laureate George Akerlof's 1970 paper "The Market for Lemons". His original example had to do with used cars. Why does the seller want to get rid of the car? It might be a lemon. The buyer and seller have asymmetric information. . Insurance is all about risk. If the young and healthy go without coverage, then insurers are constantly left covering the older and sicker a riskier pool. As the insured require more care, those in the pool pay higher premiums, forcing some to drop out. Imagine, Thoma explains, if only the sickest the lemons are left in the pool. If you let all the healthy people drop out you dont have anyone to pay for the unhealthy people, he said. Think of it like Social Security. Ask a group of 25-year-olds if they want to see 6.2 percent of their paychecks siphoned off for their old-age pension old-age pension: see pension; social security. , and surely many will say no. But as a society we have agreed to pay into the Social Security system to take care of old folks, believing that the next generation of young people will follow suit. The Constitution does not guarantee the right to Social Security, which leads to the Constitutional question raised by Heller. The congressman is right in that nowhere in the Constitution does it say: We the people require everyone to have health insurance. Many federal laws are not spelled out in the Constitution, from the unpopular and abandoned 55 mph speed limit to the ongoing mandate to desegregate de·seg·re·gate v. de·seg·re·gat·ed, de·seg·re·gat·ing, de·seg·re·gates v.tr. 1. To abolish or eliminate segregation in. 2. schools. The Constitution establishes broad authority to provide for the common defense, promote general welfare and secure the blessings of liberty, among other tasks. Congress can pass laws Pass laws in South Africa were designed to segregate the population and were one of the dominant features of the country's apartheid system. Introduced in South Africa in 1923, they were designed to regulate movement of black Africans into urban areas. . The president can sign or veto them. And the judicial branch will test their legality. Heller believes the bill as passed by the House would be challenged in court if it were to become law. But he told Ralston he is not yet sure whether he would be party to that claim. What is certain is the iPod argument has entered the health care debate in Nevada. Lisa Mascaro can be reached at (202) 662-7436 or at lisa.mascaro@lasvegassun.com.
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