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Friday, September 14, 2007
Health Care and the New Federalism
Paul Finkelman
In the Nineteenth and early Twentieth Centuries state governments led the nation in developing progressive public policy initiatives. There were experiments in democracy including state laws abolishing slavery, passing civil rights laws, banning child labor, regulating wages and hours, and expanding suffrage to black men and later to women. As Justice Brandeis noted, in his famous dissent in New State Ice Co. v. Liebmann (1932) “It is one of the happy incidents of the federal system that a single courageous State may, if its citizens choose, serve as a laboratory; and try novel social and economic experiments without risk to the rest of the country.” Scholars later summarized the Brandeis statement to asserting that that states were “Laboratories of Democracy.” From the late 1930s through at least the 1990s the nation stepped away from the idea that the states should be the leaders in setting public policy. Instead, we came to rely on the national government to set the standard, with a federal minimum wage, social security, national civil rights laws, and medicare. Since the 1990s the Congress, controlled or stymied by Republicans, has done little to expand social policy. Thus, the It is time for the states to step in, as they did a century ago. As Justice Brandeis noted, “there must be power in the States and the Nation to remould, through experimentation, our economic practices and institutions to meet changing social and economic needs.” This is now beginning to take place in the field of health care. We may soon see a new bifurcated The states today can learn much from the progressive reformers of the last century. Local programs that lead to a healthier, better educated, more secure work force paid off in the late Nineteenth and early Twentieth centuries. The As more states and cities take the lead the pressure will increase for those in
Comments:
So how is the Massachusetts program working? I think some empirical information would be more useful than partisan ranting. I have to say, though, that if progressive policies were uniformly conducive to prosperity, Europe would be richer than the United States, and the Rustbelt wouldn't be called that.
"We may soon see a new bifurcated America: states and cities where people have access to health care and places where they do not."
What, are you predicting that some states are going to prohibit the practice of medicine? Or do you really think that people only have "access to health care" where the government provides it?
It is amusing to see the left laud the benefits of federalism to bring about state "laboratories of democracy" when they have been attacking federalism as a "race to the bottom" for the past century.
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By a "race to the bottom," the left recognized that people would vote with their feet to escape the high taxes and regulations which were a natural result of their statist policies, putting the brakes on the implementation of such policies. Only by having the federal government compel national taxation and regulation would the good people of this country then be allowed no escape from this "utopia." The current experimentation with government provided health care at the state level will be no different. One would think that the Blue states would know better than to raise the cost of government again to accelerate the migration from their states to the relatively free areas of the country, but the Party of Asses is nothing if not stubborn. As with all "free" services where someone else pays the bill, government health care is not cutting costs. When you lower the cost of a service to the consumer (if not the tax payer), that pesky law of supply and demand kicks in and increases demand for these services. Well, the law of supply and demand has already kicked in here. State governments are either cutting back services (Tenncare) or whining to Washington to increase Medicaid/Medicare funding to cover the shortfall. Medicaid is literally bankrupting the states with high single digit and double digit growth, squeezing out other basic government services like schools, roads and infrastructure. Now, some states are accelerating this negative trend by expanding eligibility. However, unless the feds do bail the states out with more deficit spending, the wonderful mechanism of federalism will check this nonsense. The outflow of the middle class and business from these states will accelerate, cutting off the tax revenues necessary to finance these programs. You will then see a deepening of an already existing bifurcated America - expensive (and mostly Blue) states bleeding the middle class and business to become places where only the very rich and the poor can live and the rest of the country where the middle class live much better lives despite not having as many not-so-free government services. That is the "race to the bottom" which led those on the left during previous generations to attack rather than laud federalism. Today's left will catch on shortly.
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