To combat America's brutal inequities, tax billionaires to make healthcare a human right

Sen. Bernie Sanders

We are facing an unprecedented public-health and economic crisis. The coronavirus pandemic has already killed nearly 200,000 Americans and infected more than 6 million. Tens of millions of Americans have filed for unemployment, 12 million are newly uninsured, 40 million face the threat of eviction, and almost 30 million are struggling with hunger.

And yet—unbelievably—at a time when a deadly virus continues to rage across our country, 1 in 7 Americans say they would avoid seeing a doctor because they’re afraid of outrageous medical bills. Meanwhile, from March to August, the richest American billionaires on average accumulated nearly $5 billion in new wealth every day.

In my view, the solution to the outrageous inequality on one hand, and the dire, unmet medical needs on the other, is straightforward: We must tax the billionaire class’ obscene gains in wealth during this pandemic in order to provide free medical care to all of our people for the duration of this national emergency.

That is why I and colleagues introduced the Make Billionaires Pay Act in August. Our legislation would impose a 60% tax on the obscene wealth gains billionaires have made during this extraordinary crisis. Between mid-March and early August, 467 billionaires—the top 0.0001%— increased their wealth by $731.8 billion. A 60% tax on just five months of wealth gains by these billionaires would fund the $400 billion it would take for Medicare to cover every American’s out-of-pocket health expenses for an entire year.

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.)

SERVING SINCE: 2007, now in his third term.

HEALTHCARE-RELATED COMMITTEES: Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, serving as the ranking member on the Primary Health and Retirement Security Subcommittee. He’s also the ranking member of the Senate Budget Committee and a member of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee.

Under our legislation, the federal government would pay all costs of treatment for the uninsured, and cover all out-of-pocket charges—such as copayments and deductibles—for those who already have public or private health insurance. By empowering Medicare to use its existing payment infrastructure to make healthcare free at the point of service, this could be done quickly, without saddling states or patients with more paperwork and bureaucracy.

Our bill covers prescription drugs as well. This summer, Gilead Sciences announced it would be charging hospitals around $3,000 for the coronavirus treatment remdesivir, even though it costs $10 to produce and was developed with $70 million in taxpayer-funded research.

Enough is enough. It’s time to make coronavirus-related treatments free of charge for everyone in America.

Under our legislation, the federal government would pay the same price the Veterans Affairs Department charges for prescriptions on behalf of the uninsured. That means no costs for patients, major savings for taxpayers, and an end to pharmaceutical corporations ripping off the American people in the middle of a crisis.

Providing healthcare for free to everyone who needs it during a public health emergency is not a radical idea. If every major country on the planet can guarantee healthcare to all, please do not tell me the U.S. cannot do the same.

If, in the midst of this unprecedented crisis, Congress is willing to pass a $740 billion military budget that is larger than that of the next 11 countries combined, we can surely afford to spend a fraction of that to care for our people.

We can no longer ignore the deep injustice that we faced long before this pandemic: We are the only major country in which healthcare is treated as an employee benefit, one that can disappear at any time if you lose your job.

No one who is diagnosed with cancer should have to beg for money from strangers on GoFundMe. No one with diabetes should die because they cannot afford their insulin. No one with coronavirus symptoms should be afraid to go to a doctor because of the cost, and risk infecting their family, friends and neighbors.

Let us use the immense challenge we face as an opportunity to build a just society, where healthcare is finally guaranteed to all as a human right.

The 116th Congress: Policymaking Amid the Pandemic