Taxachusetts Health Care

Some polls show health care as the top domestic policy issue among the American electorate. It will surely be a major issue in the 2008 Presidential elections. According to Sally Pipes of the Pacific Research Institute, “Health care reform is hot this election season and Presidential hopefuls from both parties appear weekly with promises of reforms that will supposedly solve our system’s problems with universal coverage at affordable costs.”

Candidates probably won’t be looking too seriously at adopting the European single-payer model in the U.S., but they may find themselves looking a bit closer to home, namely Massachusetts. Should they? Ms. Pipes has her doubts:

“A recent overhaul in Massachusetts that expanded taxpayer-funded health insurance and requires individuals to purchase government-approved policies is proving particularly compelling to many, not the least because its architect, Mitt Romney, is a leading Republican candidate.

In reality, the Massachusetts mandate provides a poor model for the rest of the country - unless we are looking for an expensive expansion of government. It won’t achieve universal care. It has increased government spending, bureaucracy, and regulation. It most certainly will prompt increased taxes.”

Read the rest of her analysis here.

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