It doesn't cost everybody $4,000. It costs the uninsured more than the insured. That is a BIG problem that could be fixed.
That's the main purpose of the mandate - force by law everyone into having coverage, and you no longer have the uninsured taking on the real cost while the insured get a reduced cost due to group price negotiation. Everything swings the other direction, the healthy pay for the care of the sick and the rich pay for the care of the poor. This is classic progressive tax policy.
One of the things I don't like about the plan is requiring everyone to be insured. Like President Obama told the AMA, preventive steps are part of the solution.
The current plan sort of penalizes a person for working out and staying away from junk food. A person in their 20's that is not overweight and avoids all the "bad for you" pitfalls, could easily get by with little insurance coverage if any. Maybe a catastrophic plan only.
If the government mandates the amount of coverage you must have, it would have to be at a level that protects the average American who does not make all the healthy choices. Poor, healthy 24 year old, gym-rat John will have to help pay for 35 year old, junk food junkie, chain smoking, couch-potato Jane to have the same coverage. I see no built-in financial incentive to eat clean, moderate vices, and exercise.
Yep.
For what it's worth, the gateway plans will have preventitive requirements, but I doubt it'll be any more than what you get in current plans. Nothing will be forced of course. Medicare and Medicaid work this way as well. I've met Medicaid patients that are full blown alcoholics and the government does nothing about it, they just keep dishing out care. Something we could probably reform down the road like we did with Welfare.
Of course, they may yet get around to that. Maybe it's already in the details. There needs to be some level of personal responsibility. Good behavior should be encouraged and bad behavior discouraged.
The bill details general preventitive care guidlines, but the details will be decided down the line by the HHS secretary, probably a year or so from when (and if) this gets passed. The state gateways don't have to be set up for up to three years.
I did read today that the White House is open to not having a public health-insurance plan.
Yep. I have to give props to some centrist dems in the Senate Finance Committee, they clearly see the cost pitfalls of pure government run care. I really like the non-profit co-op idea, it's a great middle ground.
Of course, dems will likely try and exert more and more control over these over time, but that is a fight for another day. All we have to do is look at what can happen when a private entity gets a presumed government guarantee (Freddie and Fannie) to know what could go wrong. The less responsibility the government has over these co-ops the better. Otherwise they'll just lose money hand-over-fist and we'll be bailing them out forever.
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