Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
2016 Postmortem
In reply to the discussion: Kick if you are ready for 100% increase in tax revenues. [View all]kennetha
(3,666 posts)116. Actually people who are serious about single payer
Have written about this.
Here's an article
What will happen to all of the people who work for insurance companies?
The new system will still need some people to administer claims. Administration will shrink, however, eliminating the need for many insurance workers, as well as administrative staff in hospitals, clinics and nursing homes. More health care providers, especially in the fields of long-term care, home health care, and public health, will be needed, and many insurance clerks can be retrained to enter these fields. Many people now working in the insurance industry are, in fact, already health professionals (e.g. nurses) who will be able to find work in the health care field again. But many insurance and health administrative workers will need a job retraining and placement program. We anticipate that such a program would cost about $20 billion, a small fraction of the administrative savings from the transition to national health insurance.
PNHP has worked with labor unions and others to develop plans for a jobs conversion program with would protect the incomes of displaced clerical workers until they were retrained and transitioned to other jobs.
The new system will still need some people to administer claims. Administration will shrink, however, eliminating the need for many insurance workers, as well as administrative staff in hospitals, clinics and nursing homes. More health care providers, especially in the fields of long-term care, home health care, and public health, will be needed, and many insurance clerks can be retrained to enter these fields. Many people now working in the insurance industry are, in fact, already health professionals (e.g. nurses) who will be able to find work in the health care field again. But many insurance and health administrative workers will need a job retraining and placement program. We anticipate that such a program would cost about $20 billion, a small fraction of the administrative savings from the transition to national health insurance.
PNHP has worked with labor unions and others to develop plans for a jobs conversion program with would protect the incomes of displaced clerical workers until they were retrained and transitioned to other jobs.
http://www.pnhp.org/facts/single-payer-faq
Edit history
Please sign in to view edit histories.
148 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
RecommendedHighlight replies with 5 or more recommendations
Sometimes I wonder if these OPs come from Weekly World News, next to Elvis was a Space Alien! nt
TheBlackAdder
Feb 2016
#114
Your OP says "federal revenue" and that is what I gave a link to. It is ~$3.3 Trillion
Motown_Johnny
Feb 2016
#113
Me too or three! And for firms like Verizon, which over the past few years have paid Zero
truedelphi
Feb 2016
#120
This message of Hope and Change brought to you from the fear mongers at Hillary Co.
NightWatcher
Feb 2016
#16
An economist found that median income would increase by $22,000 if Bernie Sanders gets to the White
pberq
Feb 2016
#19
Well . . . jeez . . . I'll happily pay more taxes so everyone can have Medicare like I do.
Vinca
Feb 2016
#33
LOL, hillary, is that you? Wow, fucking desperation taking over the hill fans. Nt
Logical
Feb 2016
#62
Yeah, America is so great that we can't do what every other industrialized country.....
DrewFlorida
Feb 2016
#66
Wow - I didn't realize you were a CEO of a corporation that hides its earnings in the Cayman Isles.
jillan
Feb 2016
#71
I make about 14,000 per year...and my health care wants me to pay 800+ per month
angstlessk
Feb 2016
#82
Not quite doubling TOTAL federal revenue but increasing it by an amount equal to
kennetha
Feb 2016
#85
If it was okay for Bernanke and Geithner to "leak" some 22 trillions of dollars to the
truedelphi
Feb 2016
#104