The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services logo.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services logo.

One of the most overlooked points in the argument for a federal single-payer health insurance system is how great it would be for business. A single-payer system would not only give businesses a huge boost in their two most valuable resources — time and money — but also brings many other advantages. With Medicare for All, H.R.3069, supported by more than half the Democrats in the U.S. House, everyone would have health coverage for life. A single-payer plan would replace private insurance plans, and bring an end to employer-provided insurance. Here’s more on how it makes good sense for business: 

Saving Costs: According to Physicians for a National Health Care Program, companies would pay less under a single-payer system than they currently pay as a single-payer system eliminates workman’s compensation costs and health care costs for retirees. 

Saving Time: Businesses today waste time choosing among insurance plans, negotiating with private insurers, and handling administrative paperwork that primarily benefits insurance company profits. Under a public system, employers would replace those higher monthly premiums with a lower payment made directly to the government. That change would cut administrative overhead and allow human resources departments to focus on supporting employees rather than managing insurance bureaucracy. 

Ending Discrimination: Questions of pre-existing conditions, age, employment, income and location would disappear, along with high deductibles, shocking co-pays and ever-increasing premiums. 

Competing in the Global Economy: All businesses will benefit from a single-payer system because they would be better able to compete both domestically and globally. Additionally, since most industrialized countries already have a version of a single-payer system, companies in those countries wouldn’t be at a disadvantage by being in the United States. 

Empowering Small Business and Job Creation: Single-payer benefits are especially important for small businesses owners, farmers and the self-employed. A small business owner doesn’t have a human resources department to sift through all the insurance negotiating work. Under a single-payer system, entrepreneurs will no longer have to be burdened by the responsibility of providing health care coverage for employees; they can focus on running their business. 

Bringing Transparency: Businesses that provide health insurance for their employees are, in effect, subsidizing those that do not. A Public Citizen study makes the case that single-payer would “stop penalizing businesses that provide health insurance” and calls health insurance premiums a “triple tax”: first, the premiums for individual employees and their families; then, the premium-embedded cost-shifting hospitals charge to make up for lower costs paid by Medicaid; and, finally, the increase in premium rates to compensate for the losses incurred in treating the uninsured.

Bringing Stability: In addition, business leaders currently have no input into health care costs, the costs that help determine the price of the premiums. The process for increased hospital or pharmaceutical costs is a mystery, totally out of the hands of the business paying the premiums. They have to pay what the insurance industry demands. The lack of predictability and the constant fluctuation make it difficult for businesses to plan for the future. A single-payer plan guarantees stability. 

Improving Health and Productivity: All companies would benefit from having healthier employees and fewer missed working days, and companies wouldn’t compete for qualified employees based on their ability to provide health insurance. 

Providing Freedom of Choice: Gerald Friedman, a University of Massachusetts economics professor, estimates about 95 percent of families would save money under such a system. Beyond saving money, businesses and families would gain peace of mind through a choice of doctors, predictable and stable health care, and expanded access to vision, dental and mental health care. 

Businesses and citizens should not need to subsidize health insurance profits any longer. As we enter the mid-term election season, our candidates should support this common sense measure to put people over profits. Leaders should support single-payer healthcare to help American businesses thrive.

Sam Rasoul is a member of the House of Delegates, where he serves on the House Health and Human Services Committee. He is a Democrat from Roanoke.

Rasoul represents most of Roanoke in the House of Delegates. He is the only Democrat from the House...