Why not drop restrictions that prevent individuals from purchasing health insurance across state lines?Its no wonder that insurance markets are especially concentrated in some, typically small states. From an insurance company's perspective, the more people you cover, the lower your costs will be. As a result, its hard for a large number of insurance companies to stay in business in a single state because they would be slicing the population too thin to be profitable. I don't see why we need more government to improve competition by offering a public option. Its kind of the government's fault that competition is so restricted now. At least that's the way I see it. Let me know if I got something wrong.
6/26/2009 10:15:45 AM
^Exactly, duh. What you're missing is that this has been the plan all along... The socialists know what they're doing:1) create bad policy over decades that tampers with the free market and results in high insurance and doctor costs.2) Blame it on the free market, or capitalism in general.3) Obtain a democratic-party-controlled white house and congress.4) Convince all the "free-lunch" idiots that a government-based health-care plan is the way to go.5) Get the votes in congress.6) Enact the public plan.7) Slowing expand the program over the next 10 or 20 years and then get rid of all private health care.8) Pursue further private-sector takeovers until a popular socialist coup takes DC and burns the constitution.9) Viva la Socialism! Hooray for the USSA!
6/26/2009 11:11:36 AM
If that were allowed, wouldn't all insurance companies movie to whatever state offered them the most protections and the least restrictions, kind of like how all credit card companies are based in Delaware?
6/26/2009 11:14:00 AM
^ I would not be surprised if that happened to a large extent. Though most restrictions come in the form of what plans must offer in a given state (at least as i understand it). I think we would definitely some companies move to states where they were able to offer plans that did not cover as much for a cheaper price. And I don't think that's a bad thing. But if you are really really worried about a race to the bottom and are unconvinced by arguments to the contrary, wouldn't it make more sense to just have the federal government decide what protections and restrictions should be in place at a national level??? You know, rather than get the government in the health insurance business?I am personally much more comfortable with that approach than with the public option every Dem keeps floating. Not because I'm afraid of creeping socialism. But because I think it spells much less trouble down the road in terms of fiscal solvency. I just don't buy arguments that a public option will be able to substantially reduce health care costs. And that means a public option only makes future debt problems worse.[Edited on June 26, 2009 at 11:42 AM. Reason : ``]
6/26/2009 11:40:51 AM
That's why if you were to allow health insurance companies to sell policies across state lines, you'd have to hit them with the Interstate Commerce Clause and regulate them from Washington.While I like the idea, I can see some headaches in implementing it. Right now, we have a really complex patchwork of health insurance regulations, and I don't know if states are going to be willing to give up the control they have. Even if they were willing, would they be okay with it if it means that they'd lose some of the state-specific protections?
6/26/2009 12:03:12 PM
Big problem with this idea:Some states only mandate coverage for 3 items, where as other states have mandated coverage for more than 50 items.
6/26/2009 12:27:01 PM
Maybe instead of letting the state government, federal government, employer, etc. decide what items should be covered, maybe we let... oh, I don't know...the individual decide?
6/26/2009 12:54:30 PM
^^Firstly, which states? http://www.cahi.org/cahi_contents/resources/pdf/HealthInsuranceMandates2008.pdfSecondly, this would not be a problem even if it were true The real problem is that states mandate too many benefits - often as a result of lobbying pressure from professional organizations (e.g. American Chiropractor Organization). With each mandate, premiums must rise to fund it. More perversely, adding additional coverage reduces the out-of-pocket expense for consumers, leading them to demand more services than they would had they had to pay it themselves.[Edited on June 26, 2009 at 12:57 PM. Reason : s]
6/26/2009 12:56:49 PM
6/26/2009 2:22:23 PM
Harvard economist, Greg Mankiw, on the public option:
6/27/2009 10:33:31 PM
^ I gotta say, I agree with Mankiw.
6/28/2009 11:43:43 PM
What would it take for multi-state insurance? The simple agreement among states to mandate the same coverage?
7/1/2009 1:16:31 PM