by Jane Sneddon Little
with Michael D. Jud
July/August 1994
The United States has begun the huge task of reforming its health
care system and many individuals have already begun to consider the
likely impact of health care reform on their state’s economy. Given the
momentum of change in the private sector and at the state level, the
U.S. health care system will never be the same again, with or without
federal legislation. Because New England is the U.S. region most
dependent on employment in health care services, concerns about the
impact of health care reform are particularly acute in this area.
Accordingly, this article presents a preliminary analysis of the
regional impact of health care reform. The country’s concerns seem clear
enough and its financing options~ are limited enough to permit examining
the regional impact of reform using the Clinton Administration’s
Health Security Act as an illustrative example. The study concludes that
reform under the Health Security Act or any other viable plan could lead
to a not insignificant shift of economic resources and activity away from
most New England states, in large part because this generally highincome
region will help fund improved access and subsidized premium
payments in other parts of the country. Nonetheless, within the decade,
health reform will provide net savings within the region and the nation.
Recognizing the redistributional challenges in store, New England
leaders and taxpayers must seek to use their share of these savings in
ways that promote the economic vitality of the region.
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