Methinks this thread needs to die...
Is somebody forcing you to reply to posts?
...As I see insurance reform as a way forward, and you don't, addressing this point *is* an attempt by me to advance the discussion.
I am not opposed to "insurance reform" in principle. I am opposed to what you are calling "insurance reform", which does not deliver improved "health care reform". The Finance Committee version of the bill seems likely to be another gift to industry in the guise of health care reform. It is the insurance industry bill.
Here's my understanding - every year the insurance companies pay out somewhere in the order of 80% of our premiums in benefits. Their profit margins are all less than 5% according to investment research firms like Morningstar. The rest is overhead - to include, of course, high executive salaries - but mostly underwriting, sales and marketing, and claims processing...
I do not know anything about Morningstar and have no opinion as to the objectivity or accuracy of their reports. From their web site, it does not appear that they are an independent source of information on the insurance industry. The issue here is not just profitability but the tremendous OVERHEAD that goes into propping up a broken system. And, oh yes, overhead does include high executive salaries, often at tremendous expense to ordinary stockholders. Please do not shove that fact under the rug as you try to make a case for this dysfunctional system.
...There are a lot of people employed in this industry. Our premiums are not rising every year because of increased profits...
Did you forget the overhead invested in employing all of those people to help deny claims, cancel policies, and, oh yes,
pay high executive salaries?
...In fact, insurance companies have been having a harder and harder time turning a profit. They are rising every year because of increased payouts to providers...
Have they been cutting executive salaries to be able to afford those payments? I hadn't realized that. :sarcastic Look, you are making a gallent effort to defend the insurance companies by shifting blame to providers, but nobody is entirely free of guilt in the marketplace mess we've created. Drug companies manipulate health care professionals and patients (through TV ads for prescription drugs--a practice that ought to be illegal). Providers try to gouge consumers and insurers. And all of the big orgnanizations are able to mount propaganda and disinformation campaigns to protect and grow their piece of the pie.
...Americans gorge on everything from gasoline to swimming pools. We gorge on health care too. And the health care providers are lining up to get folks to consume whatever they are offering, which is all too easy when a third party is paying...
Oh, let's not forget to blame the public. A lot of them deserve to get sick and die until they put pressure on themselves to just voluntarily stop abusing the system. Some day, Americans will be as well-behaved as Europeans and Canadians. Then we can implement a single-payer system.
Insurance companies aren't happy about this. They have tried, and continue to try, to bring down costs with HMOs, provider networks, deductibles and co-pays and the like. American consumers have, for the most part, resisted any such attempts. So the insurance companies have no choice but to raise premiums.
Poor little self-sacrificing insurance companies. Everyone else's fault, is it? :thud:
Bringing down the cost of health care in America will, in one form or another, mean ridding Americans of this "blank check" mentality. Which means, of course, that we will have to ration care based on need and effectiveness and, to some extent, cost. This will be the case if we go single payer or if we stick with employer-based insurance. And it will be equally as difficult, politically.
Employers will still pay some of the cost in a single-payer system. That is the way it works in other countries. And insurance companies will still exist, as will health care providers and drug companies. They just won't be getting as much money for screwing up health care delivery so badly.
...We are a wealthy country, after all. And we do get something for this money. If you have good insurance it is still the best place in the world to get sick...
First of all, beware of that blank check mentality. We really cannot afford to pay that much more for our health care than countries that have a comparable or better standard of living. Secondly, "good insurance" is in decline now. Even those of us with good employee benefits are watching it diminish, and we are no longer at the forefront of scientific and medical advances. Some of the real innovation is going on in countries like India, not here.
If we can achieve UHC with employer based insurance - then great...
How could that work without universal employement? I don't think that you really mean this the way it comes off.
If we can achieve it with single payer - that's great as well. I'm not opposed to the public option. If you are right - that it's simply a matter of political will - I may disagree but I will cheer you on nonetheless. What I won't abide is the notion that it has to be this way or no way at all.
I'm not saying that. I have been arguing against the way it is shaping up to be--a giveaway to insurance companies without any substantial reduction in the amount paid for it. Indeed, it looks like we are getting ready to shovel even more money out of our pockets for a system that fails to deliver adequate health care.