Eric Hanneken's Library tagged → View Popular
Florida’s Public Option
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Florida has had a public option for years, not for health insurance but for property insurance.
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As the largest private insurer pulls out over a three-year period (that period negotiated with the state), Citizens will get an even larger share of Florida’s property insurance.
Everybody in Florida knows Citizens is a fiscal time bomb. Already, every Florida insurance policy (on homes, boats, cars, etc.) pays a surcharge that goes to Citizens, but Citizens still doesn’t have sufficient reserves to weather a major hurricane. When one comes, Florida taxpayers will be on the hook for the bill.
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The Tragedy of Health Insurance: How the insurance industry has haplessly abetted the rise of a government-run health care system
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By conferring a regulatory monopoly on each state, the
McCarran-Ferguson Act ends up protecting insurance companies from
interstate competition—residents may not buy policies from
insurers located outside their state. Because health insurers are
insulated against out-of-state competition, state insurance
commissions and legislatures feel free to impose coverage
mandates that
significantly drive up policy premiums. -
The truth is that companies don’t want competition; they want
government guaranteed profits. Mesmerized by the prospect that an
individual insurance mandate would provide them with tens of
millions of new government-subsidized customers, private health
insurers have allowed themselves to be maneuvered into an
inexorable process that will lead to their destruction.
Public plan mirage
Robert Samuelson might also have mentioned that Medicare is insolvent in the face of retiring Baby Boomers.
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The public plan's low costs would be artificial. Its main advantage would be the congressionally mandated requirement that hospitals and doctors be reimbursed at rates at or near Medicare's.
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But health costs wouldn't subside; hospitals and doctors would offset the public plan's artificially low reimbursements by raising fees to private insurers, as already occurs with Medicare.
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The Pitfalls of the Public Option in Health Care
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Even if one accepts the president’s broader goals of wider access to health care and cost containment, his economic logic regarding the public option is hard to follow. Consumer choice and honest competition are indeed the foundation of a successful market system, but they are usually achieved without a public provider. We don’t need government-run grocery stores or government-run gas stations to ensure that Americans can buy food and fuel at reasonable prices.
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a public plan without taxpayer support would be yet another nonprofit company offering health insurance.
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Obama the Health-Care Reformer Should Grow Up
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His desires are a primary, things that can be achieved if only we want them badly enough. All that prevents fulfillment are the obstacles created by uncooperative, ideological, and perhaps evil people.
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The great achievement of the first economists was their realization that there are natural laws of economics. They noticed real-world chains of cause and effect rooted in the logic of human action. Prices are set by supply and demand.
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