halik
Lifer
- Oct 10, 2000
- 25,696
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Originally posted by: Codewiz
Originally posted by: halik
Originally posted by: sactoking
Originally posted by: halik
Originally posted by: sactoking
A) This is no different than paying a retainer to an accountant, attorney, or financial adviser. If this is insurance, then retainers in general are speculative and they ALL should be insurance.
B) The argument that that a plan such as this is bad b/c it disincentivizes people from getting "real" coverage is wrong b/c:
1) The target market for a program like this doesn't get "real" coverage anyway.
2) You can sell 'catastrophic' plans to supplement this for pennies on the dollar compared to "real" plans. It's proven to work. See: Umbrella policies and High-deductible health plans
People w/o any coverage already demonstrate that they don't care about the potential bankruptcy on their part , so I very much doubt they would voluntarily sign up for it. I'm not opposed to the plan if you force people to get catastrophic coverage along with it.... otherwise you end up with people switching from catastrophic to this plan.
I am very much against it if you force people to take catastrophic coverage. That's a separate issue.
What I'm saying is this: A policy that offers comprehensive coverage for minor AND catastrophic events is more expensive than the coverages separately. Don't believe me? Go to the State Farm or Farmers 'affluent' groups and ask for a $1,000,000/$3,000,000/$1,000,000 auto policy. They'll offer you an umbrella. Why? Because the loss and underwriting expenses on claims in the $1,000,000 range can be separated from the $1,000 loss expenses. It results in cheaper coverage.
If you offer $80/month coverage for skinned knees and supplemental coverage for appendicitis, it will be cheaper than just offering one plan for both. Some people who might not otherwise afford coverage now will be able to. The best part is that some people still can't/won't but supplemental coverage and society will have to subsidize them, but the total cost will be less than if we were subsidizing them for EVERYTHING, and we prevent gov't from taking another step to controlling everything and expanding their inefficiency.
We're arguing the same point here, I agree that you can get two separate coverages for cheaper than a regular plan. My argument is that people will not go for both*, and moreover they will substitute from catastrophic coverage to the $80/mo coverage.
From public policy perspective, you'd want the exact opposite - it's a lot better for people to have catastrophic coverage and no $80/mo coverage rather than the opposite... because the latter isn't a true insurance and cost of catastrophes will be passed onto others.
* if you don't have catastrophic covearge, but can afford and are considering the $80/mo plan for regular limited coverage, you've already revealed your preferences regading the risk of bankruptcy by hospitalization. Since you have the $80/mo, but don't cover yourself with catastrophic policy, you will not cover yourself with catastrophic coverage on top of the $80/mo limited plan ceteris paribus. This follows from preference theory of economics.
And what you miss is this. The cost of paying for the flu, cold, rash FAR FAR FAR HIGHER than paying for catastrophic illnesses.
If you are looking to DECREASE hospital costs AND decrease insurance costs, you need to get people to pay for routine care INCLUDING things like flu, colds, rashes.
To give you an example. My co-worker has a really trashy step brother who just had a child. Medicaid would only pay for so many doctor visits. So they now go to the emergency room for every little problem with the child and don't pay for anything. Since the child is in daycare, the kid gets sick almost every week. We are talking about probably $5000-10000 in emergency room costs for something that could easily be covered by having a doctor offer this type of service. Multiply that by millions and you will understand.
Those are the people running up the medical costs in the country.
Do you have a link for that?
You can see a hundred "sick" kids for every dialysis, chemo treatment, appendicitis (mine was $20K