House Budget Committee Chairman John Yarmuth (D-Ky.) on Tuesday requested information from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) about single-payer health care proposals, a step forward in consideration of the idea.
In a letter to the CBO, Yarmuth requested a report on the “design and policy considerations lawmakers would face in developing single-payer health system proposals.”
{mosads}Getting input from the CBO is an important step forward for consideration of single-payer health care, sometimes also known as “Medicare for all.” The idea has gained new momentum with Democrats taking control of the House.
Republican Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) in the last session of Congress requested a CBO analysis of Sen. Bernie Sanders’s (I-Vt.) single-payer proposal, with the hope that it would hurt the effort by highlighting its high costs.
Yarmuth, on the other hand, is not requesting an analysis of a specific bill, so it will not carry a headline cost number the way a score of Sanders’s bill would. Instead, Yarmuth is looking for information on various important decisions Democrats will have to make on single-payer.
The CBO report is a precursor to hearings in the Budget Committee.
“The House Budget Committee will soon schedule hearings to review potential ways to achieve affordable, high-quality health care coverage for everyone, including Medicare for All,” Yarmuth said in a statement. “To begin that work, I have requested that the Congressional Budget Office provide a report on the design considerations that policymakers should consider in developing proposals to establish a single-payer system in the United States.”