Elizabeth Warren is the new Paul Ryan

A wonk-approved politician releases an audaciously ambitious plan to remake American government — only the math falls apart on close inspection. Sound familiar?

Elizabeth Warren and Paul Ryan.
(Image credit: Illustrated | Sean Rayford/Getty Images, Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images, Nastco/iStock, Alenast/iStock)

Elizabeth Warren's "Medicare for All" proposal is supposed to be the wonk-approved version of single-payer universal health care. Surely the supersmart Harvard professor and her team of elite economic advisers would be the ones to fashion a blueprint that makes the financial math work in a realistic way. No gimmicks or dodges. No "rigged health plan" from the presidential candidate attacking America's "rigged economy."

But that's not the Medicare-for-all plan that Warren delivered. Yes, superficially the math works. Of course, making everything balance in a spreadsheet is a faulty first step if the assumptions underlying those numbers are economically unreasonable or politically fantastical. And the Warren plan is chock full of assumptions afflicted with both flaws. It assumes the U.S. can make wealth taxes on the superrich work when many other advanced economies have abandoned them. (Only four of the 15 European countries that tried a wealth tax in recent years kept it.) It assumes it can squeeze far more costs from the system than other estimates from experts not currently running for president. And it assumes those deep cuts wouldn't result in hospital closures and less investment in potential breakthrough drugs.

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James Pethokoukis

James Pethokoukis is the DeWitt Wallace Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute where he runs the AEIdeas blog. He has also written for The New York Times, National Review, Commentary, The Weekly Standard, and other places.