TDS Co-Editor William Galston Says Keep Health Reform Honest
There have obviously been a lot of lies told about health care reform this year, including lies about its provisions, costs and benefits, But as William Galston notes today in The New Republic, there's a growing temptation among reform advocates to prevaricate a bit too, particularly via the sorts of accounting gimmicks that made the Bush administration notorious. The real problem, says Galston, is the risk of self-deception about the true costs of health reform:
This may strike some readers as a detail, or worse, as a diversion. I don’t think so. We’re already facing an unsustainable fiscal future. The least we can do is to honor the political version of the Hippocratic oath and do no harm. That’s what President Obama has promised. Serious legislators shouldn’t use accounting tricks—such as pushing deficits outside CBO’s scoring windows--to sidestep this pledge.
Yeah, we've had enough of that from the bad guys.
Comments
Keeping the health reform budget honest is definirely preferred, so long as that applies to all other budgetary items. If that is not the case (and anyone with a political IQ over 50 knows it is not the case), then selectively insisting on honest budget projections for health care is politically stupid and a greater potential for disaster than dissembling.
Posted by: gdb
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October 20, 2009 04:18 PM