Well sure if you are going to force it on everyone. Depending on income and health many youth will opt for the penalty. Imagine if SS was voluntary these days. Almost the same premise, you gotta have the young's money or it wont come close to working.
10/2/2013 3:53:40 PM
taking the penalty for not having health insurance would be very dumb in the majority of casesthe individual mandate was invented by republicans as the free market solution to the free rider problem you are describing[Edited on October 2, 2013 at 4:09 PM. Reason : .]
10/2/2013 4:05:32 PM
10/2/2013 4:14:35 PM
it ads pay for performance requirements and makes the market more transparent for everyone, not just those receiving subsidiesi hate the ACA, but it will make it easier for consumers to purchase, compare, and switch insurance providers which should help premiums. it also spreads the risk which should reduce premiums in the long run.
10/2/2013 4:18:16 PM
Sure the pay for performance will be good in theory, but I'm less confident about how it works in practice. Don't get me wrong, little silos of care has been a problem for a long time;our great state has separate medicaid budgets for prescriptions and hospital visits, as a result, the prescription side would forgo an expensive medication that looks bad on their balance sheet even though without that medication, it is far more likely the patient will be in the hospital with a much larger cost and worse health outcome. My concern is whether the performance requirements encourage more ass covering and unnecessary zebra hunting when a horse is sufficient 90% of the time.I don't see how this makes the market any more transparent than it was before. There's a website now where you can compare insurance quotes side by side? Great, those existed before. How much will setting your broken leg cost? How much will your hip surgery costs? I can walk into my dog's vet and get a quote good for 30 days for any procedure, down to the last penny (though perhaps with the caveat that if X happens, you will need to pay for Y). On the other hand, you would be lucky to get anything even close to that for anything short of perhaps a physical from your PCP, they'll all say "it depends on what your insurance company will pay for", and I don't see how the ACA changes that. Serious question is there some "pricing sheet" transparency thing in the ACA that requires providers to give real quotes now?As for making it easier to switch, I don't see it. At least not for the majority of Americans. It probably will for those eligible for subsidies, but for the rest of America who has one family member eligible for company provided care at less than 9.5% of the household income, at best, it keeps everything the same as it was before since their employer care is still the best option paid with tax advantaged dollars. Never mind the hiking of the medical costs tax deduction threshold.
10/2/2013 4:46:34 PM
10/2/2013 4:50:22 PM
10/2/2013 5:38:31 PM
10/2/2013 5:48:27 PM
Disney World offers full-time jobs to 427 part-timers, so they qualify for health benefitshttp://www.orlandosentinel.com/business/os-disney-health-care-part-time-workers-20131002,0,7412492.storyWalt Disney Co. is offering full-time positions to 427 part-time employees at Walt Disney World who worked enough hours in the past year to qualify for health benefits under the federal Affordable Care Act.They seem to be the exception, but i just noticed the exchange has a place for small businesses to find coverage options for employees too.
10/2/2013 6:24:31 PM
10/2/2013 6:59:46 PM
10/2/2013 8:01:02 PM
Has anyone that lives in NC and has employer subsidized insurance gotten their new rate options? I'm concerned about what's going to pop up.If you have, what kind of increase / decrease are you seeing? Is your previous plan still offered?
10/3/2013 11:43:32 AM
our rates are not changing at all because of this, in fact our rates are guaranteed for 3 years
10/3/2013 11:50:25 AM
10/3/2013 12:02:55 PM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/10/02/obamacares-biggest-problem-right-now-isnt-glitches-its-traffic/
10/3/2013 1:25:34 PM
yeah but that was cause blizzard purposefully built capacity for standard usage instead of peak usage (which is im sure what they also did w/ healthcare.gov). in blizzards case they did it cause there was no reason for them to spend the extra money when they could wait it outin healthcare.gov's case they probably thought people wouldn't all slam it at once. which tbh would probably have been the case if the shutdown coverage hadn't reminded everyone about it non-stop. once people start giving up it will be fine and they'll just go in and do it later. really they should just have the high load page say "you have XXX days to get this done, so its fine if you come back later. "
10/3/2013 1:59:18 PM
10/4/2013 12:32:51 PM
Yes, but think of all the people you're helping!
10/4/2013 12:40:36 PM
My HDHP plan is the same price as last year.[Edited on October 4, 2013 at 12:46 PM. Reason : anecdotal evidence!]
10/4/2013 12:45:28 PM
I mean, that sucks, but it's an exception not the rule. Employer health care costs have risen the past couple years, by ~4%, which is historically quite low. This year they are expected go up around 4.8%, which is still less than the 7% historical average. Overall, insurance premiums and health care costs in general have grown, but slower than usual since Obamacare was passed.I will say, the employer mandate is probably the worst piece of policy in the entire law and needs to be either reworked or entirely revoked. For one, it only affects a tiny percentage of people in the first place, ~1% of US workers. Something like 95% of large employers already offer their full time employees health insurance. It also incentivises cutting hours, which has been the most publicized negative effect of the law. The added costs of reporting for companies, and the regulatory costs for the government just isn't worth the relatively small potential social benefits.
10/4/2013 12:52:13 PM
10/4/2013 1:23:51 PM
more evidence:A Staunch Republican Tries Obamacare ... And Discovers That It's Actually Pretty Awesome
10/4/2013 1:45:35 PM
10/4/2013 2:18:07 PM
10/4/2013 11:35:34 PM
10/5/2013 1:11:54 PM
have you idiots not thought that maybe multiple parties are involved in the cost of healthcare, the two largest being medical providers and insurance companies?
10/5/2013 1:14:23 PM
why do you think it's the providers, though? They are being forced to raise costs due to insurance companies and medicare. Would you rather they kept their "prices" the same and just went out of business?
10/5/2013 9:20:06 PM
10/5/2013 9:46:03 PM
basic Common sense? When the overwhelming majority of your customers are getting a "discount", you have to increase your prices to make up for it.
10/5/2013 10:07:22 PM
In soviet russiaobamaland government forces you to buy a product as a condition of just being alive. (no, doesn't fit the meme really but it is applicable.)
10/6/2013 12:28:15 AM
This seems perfect for insurance companies. I can think of no other corporate product where the populace is forced to buy it. Seems like a perfect business model for them.My question is, are there any provisions in this bill that will keep the insurance companies from charging whatever they want? I realize that the markets and their competition are supposed to bring the price of premiums down, but what if they all decide to price fix? Yes that is illegal, but it happens.
10/6/2013 8:46:46 AM
I would hope someone would realize if they were price fixing.
10/6/2013 9:38:30 AM
The exchanges are the free market solution, Republicans invented these healthcare exchanges because the free market will create competition and keep prices down. Do you not trust the GOP and the free market? Are you some kind of godless Communist?!
10/6/2013 10:16:41 AM
I was asking what I thought to be a straightforward question, not expecting any of your sarcasm. Are there any mechanisms in the bill, that anybody knows of, that prevents insurance companies from setting whatever rates they like, other than being "the free market."
10/6/2013 10:26:06 AM
Well the theory would be by reducing barriers to entry into the market if a company was over charging a new company would come in at a lower cost.
10/6/2013 11:08:58 AM
10/6/2013 11:41:54 AM
http://reason.com/archives/2013/10/04/obamacare-chad-henderson-fatherNice.
10/6/2013 12:18:14 PM
There are caps on much premiums can increase annually.
10/6/2013 1:53:38 PM
o wait I thought nobody wanted obamacare: http://thinkprogress.org/health/2013/10/04/2732141/uninsured-nevadans-obamacare/
10/6/2013 3:55:25 PM
I'm pretty sure everyone wanted something better than what we had. Regretfully, what we're getting isn't better, just different.
10/6/2013 4:23:11 PM
^^Harry Reid's state, if anyone is wondering why his balls suddenly grew three sizes during this shutdown fiasco. His constituency has his back.
10/6/2013 6:07:09 PM
^^^^ are you ok with making the majority of those that already had insurance pay 100-200% more than they were previously paying because this bill forces insurance companies to offer coverage to everyone? That includes those that they will lose a significant amount of money on due to pre-existing conditions that are extremely expensive to take care of. That is the reality of what ACA does.
10/6/2013 7:00:33 PM
10/6/2013 7:12:33 PM
Would it be better if I changed it to "many?"Anecdotal from everything I have seen, but the majority of people I have talked to so far that already had insurance in NC, are experiencing significant premium increases with increased deductible requirements.Is there any part of ACA that leads you to believe people with insurance already would see comparable rates to what they had prior to ACA enactment?
10/6/2013 7:18:55 PM
10/6/2013 7:26:58 PM
^^ its probably true when your sample is all of your 20- and 30-something healthy friends
10/6/2013 7:30:53 PM
^^ So what d you expect to ACA to do to insurance premiums for the majority of people that already had insurance?
10/6/2013 7:46:48 PM
^ It's irrelevant what I "expect" if I don't have any actual facts or proofs or studies to back it up.It doesn't make sense to spread FUD based on anecdotes, or without any context.There's been several articles posted in this very thread of peoples' premiums going down, but premiums aren't the only important factor.
10/6/2013 8:29:45 PM
^^ the prediction was that insured healthy people in their 20's and 30's would see their premiums increase, more so for men than women
10/7/2013 7:22:33 AM
If you're buying insurance through the NC exchange, do you have any other options besides BCBS?
10/7/2013 11:00:17 AM