It can seem slightly strange to non-Americans that something as mundane as health insurance should be the key US domestic policy issue for decades, seemingly more important even than the Financial Crisis. In most advanced economies, health care is taken for granted and funded in one way or another by the state, while in most other countries people are used to relying on their own savings or family support.
The US is in a unique position. As a rich country, health coverage can certainly be afforded, and the fact that over 40 million Americans are not covered is seen by many as a travesty of natural justice. Republicans, on the other hand, see any attempt to improve coverage as a thinly disguised attempt to bring in more 'big government', something that they oppose with religious fervour. Free market 'believers' see the market as the solution for all problems.
The fact is however that in the case of healthcare, the free market, and the healthcare industry it has spawned, has failed Americans. It is far and away the largest healthcare industry in the world, at $2.3 Trillion, or one sixth of US GDP. It costs twice as much to provide healthcare to US citizens as it does to look after most other advanced economies populations. And yet Americans are unhealthier - and have shorter lifespans - than the rest of the G7. How can that be?
A cursory economic analysis would point to some home truths:
The simplest solution to the first two problems would be some form of national insurance, as has been practiced for decades in the UK and Canada. However this is seen as 'un-American'. Even though Americans know the current system is crazy, they are not comfortable with the idea of 'socialised medicine'.
President Obama has therefore suggested a 'uniquely American' solution that would ensure coverage for all, but that would provide a means to keep private insurance companies in check. Liberal advocates of reform have hung their hat on the 'public option', insurance provided by the government. While supporting this idea, Obama has left himself wiggle room by allowing political compromises such as trigger that would only provide a public option if the private insurance industry doesn't meet certain requirements, or non-profit co-ops.
Whatever the outcome of that legislative battle, the principle of choice, with the government keeping the private sector honest, will be enacted. In further concessions to conservatives, the bill is expected to be tort reform (ie making it harder to sue medics) and a mandatory requirement for anyone who can afford health insurance to buy into a program.
How about getting Americans to be less obese and more healthy? That approach is likely to go down like a bomb with the electorate, so neither party is actively pursuing that area, although academics are investigating what a 'fat' tax might look like.
That still leaves one major issue, which is the cost of these reforms. Having spent wildly in the Bush years, Republicans have suddenly become worried about the federal deficit. This is indeed a major problem. If the deficit was a problem last year, it has become a major issue after the bailouts and economic stimulus. It worries independents and has led to open calls for the
US dollar to be replaced as the world's reserve currency, sending the dollar plummeting.