[Congressional Record Volume 150, Number 71 (Wednesday, May 19, 2004)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5733-S5734]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                              HEALTH CARE

  Ms. STABENOW. Mr. President, 24 years ago, Ronald Reagan was running 
for President and he asked each of us as Americans a question: Are you 
better off than you were 4 years ago?
  It was the right question then, and it is the right question now. Are 
we better off than we were 4 years ago? This is a very important 
question. Unfortunately, for most middle-income Americans in 2004, the 
answer is clearly no.
  What has happened in the last 4 years while wages have been flat, gas 
prices, college tuition, health care costs have skyrocketed, millions 
of jobs have been lost, poverty is on the rise, the budget surplus has 
been squandered, the Social Security trust fund has been raided, State 
taxes have risen, household debt has gone way up, consumer confidence 
has dropped, and the stock market has gone down.
  We can look at a few of these areas with average weekly earnings flat 
at slightly over 1 percent; gas prices certainly in Michigan and around 
the country skyrocketing, going up and up; college tuition; family 
health care premiums--these are just three measures of what is 
happening to our families and what is commonly called the middle-class 
squeeze where families are not seeing their incomes go up, and yet all 
of the costs of providing opportunity for their children, of being able 
to meet the daily costs of living are going up and up.
  Today I want to talk specifically about just one of those, and that 
is the family health care premiums. Since President Bush took office, 
family health care premiums have risen more than $2,700. The average 
cost of a family plan is now above $9,000. Workers have to pay about 
$2,400 of that premium out of their own pockets, in addition to paying 
deductibles and copays.
  That is a tremendous amount of money for most families, especially at 
a time when they are facing higher costs in so many other areas. Much 
of this increase has to do with the soaring cost of prescription drugs, 
which I have come to the Senate floor to speak about on many occasions. 
The cost of prescription drugs--and this is brand-name drugs--is rising 
at about three and a half times the rate of inflation. In fact, we know 
that for some of the top name- brand drugs we see advertised on 
television every day, they are actually rising anywhere from 8 to 10 to 
12 percent faster than the rate of inflation, which is extraordinary.
  The health care system and the business community paying the costs of 
health care premiums cannot continue to absorb that, and the Medicare 
prescription drug benefit does next to nothing to rein in escalating 
costs. In fact, researchers have suggested that the new Medicare law 
will actually result in new profits for the drug companies of $139 
billion over the next 8 years.
  So here we are supposedly passing a bill to help seniors that one 
would hope would lower prices, but instead, because it does not allow 
Medicare to negotiate group discounts, it locks in up to 40 million 
people forced to pay the highest possible prices in the country,

[[Page S5734]]

resulting in $139 billion in new profits over the next 8 years for the 
pharmaceutical industries and continual struggles for our seniors who 
literally are choosing between food and medicine.
  When President Bush took office, the number of uninsured Americans 
had actually decreased for 2 straight years. The number of uninsured 
Americans had actually gone down for 2 straight years. But the dramatic 
increase in premiums during the Bush administration, combined with the 
loss of so many jobs, has left 3.8 million more Americans without 
health insurance. There are now nearly 44 million uninsured Americans, 
and the consequences are dire for these families and, I would argue, 
for communities and for businesses as well that end up seeing their 
health care premium dollars go up every time someone walks into the 
emergency room sicker than they should be, receiving inappropriate care 
and having the community hospital have to absorb and transfer that to 
the folks with insurance.
  People without health insurance do not receive the care they need, as 
I indicated, to prevent or detect or treat serious medical problems. As 
a result, they are forced to live their lives in poorer health and die 
younger. Approximately 18,000 people die prematurely each year because 
they do not have health insurance.
  We are the greatest country in the world. Shame on us if we cannot 
fix this. And we can fix it. It is just a matter of will. It is a 
matter of values and priorities. We need to turn things around and get 
this right.
  So we come back again to President Reagan's famous question: Are you 
better off than you were 4 years ago? What has happened in the last 4 
years? Again, wages have been flat, if not going down. In my State many 
folks are losing their jobs, and wages that are being replaced are 
actually lower. Gas prices are skyrocketing out of sight. College 
tuition, access to college and the American dream that we all want for 
our children, has gone up tremendously. Health care costs have 
skyrocketed, as I mentioned. As a result, our middle-income families 
are feeling squeezed more and more every day, and Americans are not 
better off. But we can be better off. We are the United States of 
America. We are the can-do country, and I know we can get back on 
track. With a few changes, with the right priorities, with the right 
values, we can turn this around. We have done it before and we can do 
it again.

  With strong leadership and a real commitment to confronting the 
problems that families face, we can do better. We can provide our 
schools and teachers with the support they deserve. We can ensure that 
every qualified student has the opportunity to attend college. We can 
build a stronger America so every worker has access to health care and 
our seniors and the disabled truly have access to their prescription 
drugs that they need at the lowest possible prices. We can restore the 
confidence of Americans that our better days are still ahead.
  We have much to do. All of these facts, all of these issues, relate 
to choices, the choices we make as we govern about who we want to make 
sure is doing better in this country. We can choose between focusing on 
those things that help Americans, help the public to do better, or the 
special interests of this country. We need to turn it around so we are 
putting people first and we are addressing those things that allow each 
of us to have the opportunity for the great American dream. We are all 
about working hard, playing by the rules, and being able to go as far 
as one can possibly go in this great country if they are willing to do 
the work.
  Too many folks are working hard and finding themselves more and more 
with costs and burdens that are stopping them from being able to fully 
obtain the American dream for themselves and their families. We are not 
better off right now, but we can be, and I am hopeful with the right 
kind of changes that we will be.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Washington.

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