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GAO says U.S. can't afford more healthcare

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While it's all well and good to expand health coverage to more uninsured Americans, doing so would impose an untenable burden on the federal budget, according to a top government official. Government Accountability Office head David Walker says that existing federal government commitments such as Social Security and Medicare are already breaking the federal bank. While some have suggested that economic growth--and a corresponding rise in tax revenues--can solve the problem, Walker says that it just can't happen.

GAO research concluded that federal liabilities have climbed 150 percent over the last six years alone, hitting $50 trillion in 2006. The Medicare Part D prescription drug benefit alone accounts for about $8 trillion of these expenses. Proposals for expanding federal health coverage--which, for example, grow the Medicaid program--can't work, he suggested. Instead, the U.S. government may have to impose austerity measures such as limiting eligibility for Medicaid by raising the income level at which people qualify.

To get more of Walker's comments:
- read this article from The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

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Comments

Well it is about time someone in the Federal Government has spoken up about this issue. The solution to providing more healthcare to those uninsured is not another government program. Perhaps an initiative where local chambers of commerce can bring small employers together so they can take advantage of group health insurance rates should be considered. In the late 90s the Oklahoma City Chamber this and it was the most creative idea that has been proposed in making healthcare affordable to small employers and their employees. Most people in this country do not work for large corporations but for businesses of less than 25 employees. That is where the bulk of uninsured workers reside.

The idea that the richest country in the world cannot afford to provide basic health care to its citizens is silly at best. The unidentified spokesperson is evidence that we can afford to employ morons at the federal level.

This American would be satisfied with a law demanding that the drug manufacturers sell to U.S. consumers at the lowest rate charged to anyone, foreign or domestic. Triple damages to any offenders. Let't include everyone in the funding for research and development.

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