'Medicare-for-All' program could cost $32 trillion but may also save $2 trillion
Sanders said his program would save $2 trillion over 10 years.
Sen. Bernie Sanders took aim at a new report released by a conservative Koch-affiliated economic policy think tank, saying its findings “accidentally make the case” for Medicare-for-All.
“Let me thank the Koch brothers, of all people, for sponsoring a study that shows that Medicare-for-All would save the American people $2 trillion over a 10-year period,” Sanders said Monday in a video released on Twitter.
Josh Miller-Lewis, Sanders’s press secretary, said the additional $32 trillion is already being spent by private insurers, and the Medicare-for-All plan would simply move the money to the government.
“In the process of moving the money from private insurers to a national health care system, you’re actually saving $2 trillion by making the system more efficient,” he told ABC News.
Moreover, the fact that a conservative institute drew conclusions about the plan’s savings is a testament to the Medicare-for-All’s efficiency, according to Miller-Lewis.
“This is a right-wing think tank, and even they found that Medicare-for-All would save money compared to the current system,” he said.
Graboyes declined to comment on how Sanders was interpreting the Mercatus Center report but said he has “high respect for senators across the board.”
“I’ve never worked at a place where scholars were more independent and free of outside interest,” he said. “My fellow scholars and I subscribe to the highest academic standards.”
Thank you, Koch brothers, for accidentally making the case for Medicare for All! pic.twitter.com/speuEL6ETC
The report was published Monday by the Mercatus Center, a think tank at George Mason University that receives donations from the conservative Koch network and supports "market-oriented ideas." It concludes the Sanders Medicare-for-All plan would increase federal budget commitments by about $32 trillion over its first 10 years of implementation.
Medicare-for-All, also known as single-payer healthcare, has become increasingly popular among Democrats, including progressive candidates such as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who pulled off a shocking primary upset last month in New York’s 14th Congressional District and made the issue a central part of her platform.
?? My platform brings all the votes to the yard: ??
- Federal Jobs Guarantee
- Medicare for All
- Tuition-free public college
- Reduce prisons by 50%
- Defund ICE
— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@Ocasio2018) April 2, 2018
The report, authored by Mercatus Center senior research strategist Charles Blahous, notes that if the Medicare-for-All plan is successful, it would lower administrative and drug costs by $2 trillion while cautioning “actual savings are likely to be less than assumed under these projections.”
“I suspect that that is not what the Koch brothers intended to do, but that is what is in the study,” Sanders said of the projected savings.
While the Koch brothers themselves did not author the report, Koch Industries CEO Charles Koch sits on the board of the Mercatus Center. This past weekend, the Koch network held its biannual meeting in Colorado Springs, where it said it plans to rebrand itself ahead of the midterms.
Robert Graboyes, a senior research fellow and health care scholar at the center who read Blahous’s report through its production, said the report doesn’t “predict” $2 trillion in savings.
“The paper says if Sanders’s plan fulfills everything its supporters hope it will fulfill, it will result in $2 trillion less in expenditures,” he told ABC News.
And more important, the $32 trillion dollar figure isn’t new, according to Graboyes, who says even left-leaning think tanks have come to similar conclusions.
“The Urban Institute, which is left-of-center, also found that the Sanders plan would cost $32 trillion,” he said, referring to the group's 2016 report concluding then-presidential-candidate Sanders’s plan would have increased federal expenditures by $32 trillion between 2017 and 2026.
But Graboyes warned that, according to the report, even doubling all currently projected federal individual and corporate income tax collections would be “insufficient” to finance the costs of Medicare-for-All.
“In individual states like California and Vermont, similar single-payer healthcare plans tanked because increasing taxes was too much of a gamble,” he said.
Even doubling individual and corporate income tax collections at the federal level would fall short of fully funding Medicare for all. https://t.co/5XxJVobxj6 #MedicareForAll
Josh Miller-Lewis, Sanders’s press secretary, said the additional $32 trillion is already being spent by private insurers, and the Medicare-for-All plan would simply move the money to the government.
“In the process of moving the money from private insurers to a national health care system, you’re actually saving $2 trillion by making the system more efficient,” he told ABC News.
Moreover, the fact that a conservative institute drew conclusions about the plan’s savings is a testament to the Medicare-for-All’s efficiency, according to Miller-Lewis.
“This is a right-wing think tank, and even they found that Medicare-for-All would save money compared to the current system,” he said.
Graboyes declined to comment on how Sanders was interpreting the Mercatus Center report but said he has “high respect for senators across the board.”
“I’ve never worked at a place where scholars were more independent and free of outside interest,” he said. “My fellow scholars and I subscribe to the highest academic standards.”
— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@Ocasio2018) April 2, 2018
The report, authored by Mercatus Center senior research strategist Charles Blahous, notes that if the Medicare-for-All plan is successful, it would lower administrative and drug costs by $2 trillion while cautioning “actual savings are likely to be less than assumed under these projections.”
“I suspect that that is not what the Koch brothers intended to do, but that is what is in the study,” Sanders said of the projected savings.
While the Koch brothers themselves did not author the report, Koch Industries CEO Charles Koch sits on the board of the Mercatus Center. This past weekend, the Koch network held its biannual meeting in Colorado Springs, where it said it plans to rebrand itself ahead of the midterms.
Robert Graboyes, a senior research fellow and health care scholar at the center who read Blahous’s report through its production, said the report doesn’t “predict” $2 trillion in savings.
“The paper says if Sanders’s plan fulfills everything its supporters hope it will fulfill, it will result in $2 trillion less in expenditures,” he told ABC News.
And more important, the $32 trillion dollar figure isn’t new, according to Graboyes, who says even left-leaning think tanks have come to similar conclusions.
“The Urban Institute, which is left-of-center, also found that the Sanders plan would cost $32 trillion,” he said, referring to the group's 2016 report concluding then-presidential-candidate Sanders’s plan would have increased federal expenditures by $32 trillion between 2017 and 2026.
But Graboyes warned that, according to the report, even doubling all currently projected federal individual and corporate income tax collections would be “insufficient” to finance the costs of Medicare-for-All.
“In individual states like California and Vermont, similar single-payer healthcare plans tanked because increasing taxes was too much of a gamble,” he said.
Even doubling individual and corporate income tax collections at the federal level would fall short of fully funding Medicare for all. https://t.co/5XxJVobxj6 #MedicareForAll
Josh Miller-Lewis, Sanders’s press secretary, said the additional $32 trillion is already being spent by private insurers, and the Medicare-for-All plan would simply move the money to the government.
“In the process of moving the money from private insurers to a national health care system, you’re actually saving $2 trillion by making the system more efficient,” he told ABC News.
Moreover, the fact that a conservative institute drew conclusions about the plan’s savings is a testament to the Medicare-for-All’s efficiency, according to Miller-Lewis.
“This is a right-wing think tank, and even they found that Medicare-for-All would save money compared to the current system,” he said.
Graboyes declined to comment on how Sanders was interpreting the Mercatus Center report but said he has “high respect for senators across the board.”
“I’ve never worked at a place where scholars were more independent and free of outside interest,” he said. “My fellow scholars and I subscribe to the highest academic standards.”
“The Urban Institute, which is left-of-center, also found that the Sanders plan would cost $32 trillion,” he said, referring to the group's 2016 report concluding then-presidential-candidate Sanders’s plan would have increased federal expenditures by $32 trillion between 2017 and 2026.
But Graboyes warned that, according to the report, even doubling all currently projected federal individual and corporate income tax collections would be “insufficient” to finance the costs of Medicare-for-All.
“In individual states like California and Vermont, similar single-payer healthcare plans tanked because increasing taxes was too much of a gamble,” he said.
Even doubling individual and corporate income tax collections at the federal level would fall short of fully funding Medicare for all. https://t.co/5XxJVobxj6 #MedicareForAll
Josh Miller-Lewis, Sanders’s press secretary, said the additional $32 trillion is already being spent by private insurers, and the Medicare-for-All plan would simply move the money to the government.
“In the process of moving the money from private insurers to a national health care system, you’re actually saving $2 trillion by making the system more efficient,” he told ABC News.
Moreover, the fact that a conservative institute drew conclusions about the plan’s savings is a testament to the Medicare-for-All’s efficiency, according to Miller-Lewis.
“This is a right-wing think tank, and even they found that Medicare-for-All would save money compared to the current system,” he said.
Graboyes declined to comment on how Sanders was interpreting the Mercatus Center report but said he has “high respect for senators across the board.”
“I’ve never worked at a place where scholars were more independent and free of outside interest,” he said. “My fellow scholars and I subscribe to the highest academic standards.”
Moreover, the fact that a conservative institute drew conclusions about the plan’s savings is a testament to the Medicare-for-All’s efficiency, according to Miller-Lewis.
“This is a right-wing think tank, and even they found that Medicare-for-All would save money compared to the current system,” he said.
Graboyes declined to comment on how Sanders was interpreting the Mercatus Center report but said he has “high respect for senators across the board.”
“I’ve never worked at a place where scholars were more independent and free of outside interest,” he said. “My fellow scholars and I subscribe to the highest academic standards.”