What is Universal Catastrophic Coverage and Why Do We Need It?
Across America, health care is a top priority for the reform
of social policy. The United States spends more per capita on health care than
any other country, but by many measures, its performance
is disappointing. Yet, wide differences remain over how to
characterize the failures of the current system and what kind of reforms are
needed. Universal catastrophic coverage (UCC)
offers a way to bridge these differences.
On the one hand, many would-be reformers see the problem primarily
as one of a broken health care payment system. Too many Americans do not have have affordable access to quality care. Too many remain one serious illness away from medical bankruptcy. Viewed in this way, the
obvious solution would seem to be a guarantee that no one has to pay more
than they can afford for the care they need. Proponents of such a policy often say they want “single-payer” health care like other high-income countries
have.
Meanwhile, other reformers see the problem more as the lack
of a working market for health care services. On the demand side, they say, the
prevalence of third-party payments erodes incentives for health care consumers
to shop for effective and reasonably priced services. On the supply side,
regulations stifle competition, block entry by would-be innovators, and protect
the interests of providers at the expense of consumers and taxpayers. Viewed in this way, the solution would seem to be to get the
government out of the way let the market do its job.
Although single-payer advocates and market reformers often
seem to talk past one another, they have more in common than it might at first
appear. By and large, they agree that even under the most market-oriented
reforms, there would still be a need for some kind of social insurance to assure
that even the very poor and very sick have access to appropriate care. At the
same time, everyone agrees that whatever is done about the payment system, there
is a need for more transparency, more choice, and more innovation than the
current system seems able to deliver.
Universal catastrophic coverage combines both approaches. Under
UCC, everyone would be protected against financially ruinous medical expenses
though insurance that would be issued free to the poorest beneficiaries while
requiring income-based cost-sharing from those who can afford it. UCC posits a
robust role for the government as a provider of social insurance where needed
while creating room for market mechanisms where they have the best chance of
working.








