Our system ties health care to our jobs -- even when those jobs are gone

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Op-ed by Mark Trahant

There  is much talk about the recession reaching bottom. The economy is at  a turning point. Again. The proof, at least this time, was the drop  in the national unemployment rate to 10 percent.

Trahant

But  that data point doesn’t really reflect the jobs picture in this country.  Here are two better ones: State unemployment funds are running out of  money; and 9.24 million people are working part time (slightly down  from a month ago) who would much rather go full time job. A year ago  the figure was 7.3 million.

Both  of these numbers have huge implications for the health care reform debate.  Too many people are working part time, without benefits, because it’s  the only job they can find.

Mike  Sherlock, an investment advisor, publishes a fascinating blog called MISH'S Global Economic Trend Analysis. He reports: “15 states have collectively  borrowed more than $15 billion and another 9 states are in the red over  unemployment benefits.” One the examples Mish cites is North Carolina  North Carolina where high unemployment has cost the state $1.4 billion  in debt, growing as much as $20 million a day. The state is hoping the  federal government at some point will forgive these loans because there’s  no real plan to pay it back.

“Let's  do the math. The state budget is $19 billion. Potentially $4 billion  will be borrowed to pay unemployment benefits. In other words the state  is borrowing an amount equal to 21% of its total budget just to pay  unemployment benefits. Wow,” Mish reports.

That’s  only one state of the 24 now in the red. Add to that the state projections  for Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance and the picture is more  complete. And bleak.

Consider  those who are working part time. If the economy is improving, folks  should start getting more hours on the job (hopefully enough hours to  quality for benefits). But that will happen before new jobs are  created. We have a long way to go.

Another  element in this crisis is health insurance. Many of those who lost their  jobs in the first wave are starting to run out of a federal subsidy  for their health insurance under COBRA. Unless Congress acts (quickly)  to extend that subsidy, health care costs for unemployed folks will  be prohibitive. A family of four could see their health insurance costs  go from roughly $500 a month to $1,500 a month. An increase that’s  nearly impossible to cover without a job. A really, really great job,  at that.

The  context for all of this is that we have tied our entire health care  system to employment. Most people get their health care through work.  If health care reform passes, this should improve through new subsidies  and exchanges – in a couple of years. But the trade off is a requirement  to buy health insurance.

Indian  Country is a special case. American Indians and Alaskan Natives will  be exempted from the mandate. But there are employment-related questions  that remain.

Would  it make sense for an American Indian or Alaskan Native entrepreneur  to buy health insurance for her workers? There would be no requirement.  The individual member would still be eligible for Indian Health Service.  And, by the same measure, would any individual on the reservation buy  into a health insurance exchange plan, even if it were subsidized? Tribal  governments would probably buy plans for employees, but that would not  close the gap.

I  started with this project with the idea that the country has much to  learn from Indian Country about health care reform. The relationship  between health insurance and your job is a good example of that thinking.  There is no employment-based system that can accommodate those outside  of the regular work force, those who fish, herd, or bead. At the same  time fixing Indian Country’s structural unemployment – with rates  that are unthinkable in any other context – must be a priority. This  is a health care issue, too.

Mark Trahant is an InvestigateWest advisory board member and 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. Comment at www.marktrahant.com

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