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Past Event

Part Two of Health Care Reconsidered: Options for Change

Who's Got the Cure? Four Options for Achieving Universal Coverage

Health Care, U.S. Economy


Event Summary

Following opening remarks by former Treasury Secretary and Hamilton Project Advisory Council member Robert E. Rubin, the first panel highlighted four new discussion papers on achieving universal coverage.

Event Information

When

Tuesday, July 17, 2007
9:00 AM to 12:30 PM

Where

Ballroom, 13th Floor
The National Press Club
529 14th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20045
Map

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

E-mail: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

A paper by Gerard Anderson and Hugh Waters of Johns Hopkins University proposes Medicare Part E(veryone), which would allow people to keep their current employer-sponsored health care coverage while at the same time offering coverage to all individuals and employers through expansion of the Medicare program (with subsidies for low income individuals). A proposal by Stuart Butler of the Heritage Foundation would move beyond the traditional model of employer-sponsored health insurance by creating state-chartered insurance exchanges to offer portable health plans and by reforming the tax treatment of health care. Ezekiel Emanuel of the National Institutes of Health and Victor Fuchs of Stanford University offer a plan to give vouchers to every American to pay for basic health insurance. They argue the vouchers, which would be funded by a value-added tax, would provide portability and promote greater cost-effectiveness. Finally, Jonathan Gruber of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology will examine the feasibility, costs, and benefits of extending nationwide the "Massachusetts model," which provides universal coverage through a combination of individual mandates, subsidies to low-and moderate-income households, and alternative risk pools to purchase insurance. Brookings Senior Fellow and Hamilton Project Director Jason Furman will moderate.

A second panel of experts from the business, labor and policy communities explored the merits and challenges of the various proposals for achieving universal coverage. Panelists included former Treasury Secretary and Hamilton Project Advisory Council member Lawrence H. Summers; Brookings Senior Fellow and former Administrator for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Mark B. McClellan; AFSCME International President Gerald W. McEntee; and Chairman and CEO of General Mills Stephen W. Sanger. Joanne Silberner, health policy correspondent for National Public Radio, moderated the panel. 

Event Multimedia:

Download panel one event audio »
Download panel two event audio »

Event Materials:

Universal, Effective and Affordable Health Insurance: An Economic Imperative, by Jason Furman and Robert E. Rubin

Achieving Universal Coverage Through Medicare Part E(veryone), by Gerard F. Anderson and Hugh R. Waters

Evolving Beyond Traditional Employer-Sponsored Health Insurance, by Stuart M. Butler

A Comprehensive Cure: Universal Health Care Vouchers, by Ezekiel J. Emanuel and Victor R. Fuchs

Taking Massachusetts National: Incremental Universalism for the United States (PDF), by Jonathan Gruber

Transcript

ROBERT RUBIN : We began what has become an ongoing process of engaging leading policy thinkers from the academic world and the policy community to develop and present policy papers around key challenges at events such as today with each event also including a panel of experts in the field in question. Very, very importantly, all of our work is conducted with great academic rigor and is based on fact and analysis, not opinion and ideology. And I think this last point is well illustrated by today's event, where we focus on a broadly held objective – universal health insurance – but we discuss four different approaches, and that takes us – four different approaches to realizing that objective – and that takes us to today's event.

Participants

Moderator

Jason Furman

Senior Fellow, Economic Studies

Joanne Silberner

National Public Radio

Panelists

Ezekiel Emanuel

National Institutes of Health

Gerald W. McEntee

American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME)

Gerard Anderson,

Johns Hopkins University

Jonathan Gruber

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Lawrence H. Summers

Harvard University

Mark B. McClellan

Director, Engelberg Center for Health Care Reform

Stephen W. Sanger

General Mills

Stuart Butler

The Heritage Foundation

Victor Fuchs

Stanford University

Welcome

Robert E. Rubin

Citigroup Inc.


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