Boilermaker Rick wrote:
leashyourkids wrote:
Boilermaker Rick wrote:
Baby McNown wrote:
Hank Scorpio wrote:
I want to say that its pointless and it doesn't matter but Obamacare gave an excuse to employers to jack up the insurance costs and offer worse service. I pay far more now for the same level of service. I suppose that things matter much more on the legislators we elect rather than president. Until we have term limits, we are stuck with the same group of idiots from presidency to presidency.
Obamacare is the reason we need single payer. If they thought the insurance companies were going to lose one penny of profit and not use the ACA as an excuse to jack rates for even more profit they were naive.
A public option "maybe" but we should never ever have a single payer system.
A public option is completely necessary if the goal of Obamacare is to decrease insurance costs. You can't ask a pool that consists entirely of private companies to comply with more regulations (such as no denial for pre-existing conditions or eliminating caps on policies) and expect their costs to go
down. What was the theory, that a larger pool of people paying in would somehow create better margins for insurance companies? If so, that's nonsense. Obamacare will never, ever decrease costs unless you have a public option to compete against the private companies. Every single additional coverage in an insurance policy has to be funded, and they are funded through higher premiums.
The issue is just how they are "competing" with insurance companies. If they are simply driving them out of business by subsidizing the losses with tax dollars then it really isn't a good option either.
If it ran like the post office which is kind of like a company that competes with private companies then that would be fine.
Though, in my opinion, the smartest move would be to get government out of health care outside of Medicare/Medicaid but then setup a system where catastrophic medical bills are covered by the government. If you get cancer or have a kid who requires a lot of medical procedures then you get that covered. We don't really need them involved with day to day operations.
I think the hope of MANY is that it would be similar to the post office in that the government option would be cheaper, but you could elect to go with a private company, you could... and the private sector, at least in theory, would provide better service and more complex coverages. Therefore, the public option wouldn't simply be driving the private companies out of business due to the lack of a profit motive.
It's been awhile since I read up on some of this stuff, but I believe that when the Obamacare debate was going on, the majority of overhead for health insurance companies was advertising costs. If that's the case, a public option could at least theoretically make them compete more with service rather than just advertisements.
Even though I work in insurance, I don't work in anything remotely close to health insurance, and I personally feel like health insurance adds little or no value. It's basically just a middle man that competes for business based on brand recognition/contracts with employers, adds overhead to healthcare, passes the costs onto the consumer, and takes a cut off the top every time. Many would say this stance is hypocritical given my profession, but I only believe that to be true of health insurance - other types of insurance have differentiating factors that health insurance does not.
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Curious Hair wrote:
I'm a big dumb shitlib baby