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- <text id=94TT0062>
- <title>
- Jan. 24, 1994: Crisis? What Crisis?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jan. 24, 1994 Ice Follies
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH CARE, Page 35
- Crisis? What Crisis?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As medical inflation eases, so does the sense of urgency that
- Clinton needs to push his revolutionary plan
- </p>
- <p>By Adam Zagorin/Washington--With reporting by Michael Duffy and Dick Thompson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The latest assault on Bill Clinton's top domestic goal began
- with 10 words on a Sunday-morning talk show last week. "We do
- not have a health-care crisis in America," declared Daniel Patrick
- Moynihan, the Senate Finance Committee chairman. His words sent
- shivers through the White House, where creating a national sense
- of urgency about health care is regarded as critical to propelling
- the President's reforms through Congress. As the week progressed,
- things only got worse. The American Medical Association, it
- was disclosed, is preparing a plan to lobby for 37 significant
- changes in Clinton's plan, including the elimination of proposed
- limits on doctors' fees. Then came a letter, signed by 565 economists,
- warning about fallout from the price controls contained in the
- Clinton proposal.
- </p>
- <p> Administration officials quickly tried to dampen the rising
- rebellion. Senior economic advisers led a hushed but urgent
- campaign to prevent the influential Business Roundtable from
- endorsing a more modest alternative to the President's 1,300-page
- plan. White House economics chief Robert Rubin and Deputy Treasury
- Secretary Roger Altman telephoned insurance-company CEOs at
- Prudential, Chubb, American International Group and CNA to urge
- them not to endorse the rival plan, backed by Representative
- Jim Cooper of Tennessee and Senator John Breaux of Louisiana.
- But the Administration's pre-emptive strike met with resistance.
- Late Friday an informal straw poll of the Roundtable's policy
- committee turned up broad support for Cooper-Breaux.
- </p>
- <p> On his return from Europe this week, Clinton aims to launch
- an all-out campaign for passage with his Jan. 25 State of the
- Union speech. But attitudes about health-care reform have shifted
- in the months since Clinton unveiled his plan in September.
- The economy has rebounded smartly, and a growing number of legislators
- have been denying the existence of a national medical emergency.
- Certainly one aspect of the crisis, the skyrocketing cost of
- care, has abated. Medical inflation fell from an annual rate
- of 6.3% in the first half of last year to 4.4% in the second
- half, according to the consumer price index. New projections
- indicate that the Federal Government will spend $120 billion
- less on Medicare and Medicaid through 1998 than was estimated
- only a year ago.
- </p>
- <p> Behind the slowdown lie aggressive steps by several states including
- Maryland, Oregon and Florida to contain medical costs. Many
- private companies are taking their own measures. Typical is
- Intel, the microchip manufacturer, which suffered 20% annual
- increases in health-insurance premiums until the introduction
- of a managed-care program in 1990 that covers 20,000 U.S. employees.
- Now costs are edging up only 5% a year.
- </p>
- <p> Another ingredient of medical-cost containment involves the
- decision by many hospitals, pharmaceutical companies and other
- providers to stabilize or lower their prices, perhaps in hopes
- of heading off congressional action on health-care reform. This,
- at least, is the argument advanced by Administration experts
- who caution that decelerating costs could prove illusory and
- that only a full-scale, Clinton-style reform with mandatory
- price restraints can tackle the job in the long run. "Medical
- inflation slowed in the late 1970s just in time to defeat a
- previous effort at cost containment," recalls Laura Tyson, chairman
- of the Council of Economic Advisers. "Later on, prices resumed
- their former upward spiral."
- </p>
- <p> Moreover, advocates of reform argue, inflation is only one of
- many health-care problems that need fixing, most notable among
- them the lack of coverage for 37 million Americans, which the
- Clinton plan is designed to remedy. Warns Paul Begala, a senior
- Clinton political adviser: "The American people believe something
- serious must be done in a country where any one of us could
- lose our medical insurance tomorrow."
- </p>
- <p> The sentiment among critics of Clinton's plan leans toward proposals
- that are more incremental, with less ambitious financing and
- lower costs. The one claiming the most support so far is the
- Cooper-Breaux plan, also known as "Clinton Lite." The proposal
- matches many features of the President's proposal but does not
- put limits on insurance premiums and will not yield universal
- coverage.
- </p>
- <p> Several Republican legislators have developed their own, mostly
- incremental plans, hoping to avoid the awkward choice between
- opposing reform altogether and voting for some variation of
- the Clinton plan, for which the President will get most of the
- political credit. But, as the saying goes, you can't beat something
- with nothing. And the Republicans have yet to agree on an alternative
- that isn't Democratic in design.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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