-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Thu, Oct 19, 2000 at 02:30:40AM -0400, Steve Furlong wrote:
Nathan Saper wrote:
On Thu, Oct 19, 2000 at 01:02:44AM -0400, Steve Furlong wrote:
Nathan Saper wrote:
<<Nathan seems to be arguing that insurance companies should be forced to cover people at a rate to be set by someone other than the insurance company. Tim May objects to this plan.>>
Close. I am arguing that insurance companies shouldn't be allowed to deny coverage based upon factors that the insuree does not have control over. For example, I smoke, so I really can't blame an insurance company for charging me extra, because that's a factor I have control over.
Most of the genetic factors against which insurance companies _might_ discriminate are predispositions. The factors _tend_ to make one _more susceptible_ to heart blow-outs, for instance.
Where do you draw the line between factors which the prospective insured can control and those he cannot? If all of your grandparents died of lung cancer, was it because they had a genetic flaw, because they smoked three packs a day, because they lived near a coal mine, or some combination of the above? How much responsibility for their deaths should they shoulder?
They discriminate based on _genetic predispositions_. Those are not affected by environment (except in extreme cases).
Fine. I'll try to find some numbers. I don't have any off the top of my head, though. It just seems that because A) the insurance companies make good profits and B) the number of people denied coverage based upon genetic abnormalities is fairly small, it wouldn't affect them too much.
I'm strongly suspicious of any statement that contains "It just seems that". Every discipline from engineering to economics shows time and again that the "obvious" conclusions are often wrong. Usually wrong, I suspect, but I don't have numbers to back that up. <g>
Also, people cannot simply create insurance companies. Breaking into the healthcare business is damn near impossible <snip the rest of the sentence>
This is the only thing you've written with which I agree. But it's an argument for _less_ government intervention rather than more.
I don't really see it as an argument for either side. Breaking into the medical industry is so difficult because there is an entire infrastructure that is developed around the established corporations, and this infrastructure isn't very flexible.
In the absense of regulation, an insurance company could form by putting a pile of money in escrow and getting some customers. Yes, the practical need for a pile of money would shut out most people, but it would be a lower barrier than the current regulatory mess. In a free market the encrusting infrastructure could be blown away in one step by a single insurer.
Perhaps. But, again, an insurance company won't insure people with genetic defects unless they are forced to. Sure, we may have more insurance companies after deregulation, but who's to say that they would fill the need for insurance for the genetically disabled?
Coverage is most often less expensive than care. Therefore, one may be able to afford the coverage, but not afford the care, if it ends up being required. ... Isn't this the whole idea of insurance? You pay them x dollars, and if you end up getting sick, they most likely have to pay more than x dollars to treat you. The insurers are banking on the fact that the majority of the people who have insurance don't get sick.
So, yes, the whole idea of insurance is to get out more than you put in.
The individual purchasing insurance is (a) betting that he'll have needs which cause him to draw out more than he put in, (b) concealing information from the insurer such that he _knows_ he'll be drawing out more than he put it, or (c) wanting or needing catastrophic coverage even though he expects to put in more than he takes out.
Company-provided plans are a whole 'nother matter; ignore them for now.
coverage for a given malady times the expected likelihood of that malady) had better be lower than the sum of the premiums paid, or they won't stay in business long. Forcing an insurer to accept an expected-high-cost customer at an "affordable" premium either drives up the premiums for everyone, causes a reduction in services for everyone (or a particular subgroup, but that would probably cause more trouble in the long run), or eats into insurer's bottom line. One expected-high-cost customer wouldn't break the insurer, but there's never just one.
If you combine a slightly reduced profit for the insurer, and slightly higher premiums, the costs could be covered. And I'd be willing to pay slightly higher premiums, if it paid for people who need medical care to be able to have it.
By the way, you don't need to email a private copy of messages you send to a mailing list. This isn't Usenet. The private copy and the list copy usually arrive within minutes of each other.
OK.
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