A political system where it’s easier to spend than to save, and to borrow than tax

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Oped by Mark Trahant

The  month of December promises to be full of drama: Will the Senate pass  health care reform? Is there enough time to debate the hundreds of expected  amendments before Christmas? And at the top of the wish list, are there  really 60 votes to pass a bill?

The  notion of requiring a super-majority in the Senate may be one of our  nation’s most anti-democratic traditions.  The Senate elects  two members from each state. California’s 36 million citizens get  two votes – exactly the same two votes as Wyoming’s 532,000 people.  The super-majority makes matters worse because senators representing  less than 40 percent of the population can block the legislation that  most Americans favor.

The  Senate has a unique history and in that favorite argument used by so  many, “we have always done it that way.” But let’s be clear about  this, the structure of the Senate does not represent democratic values.  Why does this matter? Especially when it’s worked for more than two  centuries? It matters because health care reform is a test of our continued  ability to govern ourselves.

Politicians  have been putting off difficult decisions for generations and we are  moving toward a date of resolution. The requirement of fixing health  care must be seen in the context of a political system where it’s  easier to spend than to save, and easier to borrow than to tax.

The  current scare over health care rationing makes this point exactly: No  one has to give up anything. We can afford the very best, most expensive  treatments even when they don’t work.

But  we really can’t. We can’t borrow enough money indefinitely. We have  to reform the system so that we can make choices about what’s the  best medical option for the most people. This is a concept that has  been applied to Indian Country for a long time (often with tragic consequences).  When Indian Health Service contract funds are depleted, many medical  options disappear as well. It’s my hope that health care reform will  improve, if not fix, this problem because there will be more funding  sources open to IHS patients.

But  despite the grand promises of the same doctor, the same insurance company  and yada yada, for most Americans there will be a day when cost controls  are an essential part of the equation. One way or another there needs  to be a rational discussion about rationing care.

Before  the end of the month Congress will once again have to increase the legal  limit for the national  debt that now exceeds  $12 trillion. This is a number so big it doesn’t mean anything. But  it’s not just a number; it’s a call to those of us who believe in  self-government to figure out a strategy for us to say “no” to ourselves  (and elect those who say “no” as well).

“The  nation faces an unsustainable fiscal future unless the president and  Congress change current policies,” according to updated projections  from the Center  on Budget and Policy Priorities.  … “The main driver of the long-term fiscal imbalance is the rising  per-person cost of health care, which will increase spending and reduce  revenues.”

Why  is health care so expensive? It boils down to two things: More of us  are growing older and we live longer. A study in the new issue of Diabetes Care is a good example. It says the cost of treating  diabetes (the most expensive health care treatment regime) will double  in the next 25 years to $336 billion a year. “These changes are driven  more by the size of incoming age cohorts than by changes in obesity  or overweight rates,” the study found.

We  are growing older and more expensive. We can’t afford to borrow whatever  amount we need to pay for any treatment we think might work. And, if  we get this wrong, we risk either a generational civil war (“I’m  not paying for you, old man”) or the United States collapses as quickly  as the Soviet Union did. It’s the demographic imperative that ought  to be at the heart of the Senate debate. Too bad it’s too much drama  for politics.

Mark Trahant is an advisory board member of InvestigateWest and a Kaiser Media Fellow examining the Indian Health Service  and its relevance to the national health care reform debate. He is a  member of Idaho’s Shoshone-Bannock Tribes.

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