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Will Obamacare be overturned by the SCOTUS?
The Supreme Court will completely overturn Obamacare 19%  19%  [ 4 ]
The SC will only overturn the individual mandate 52%  52%  [ 11 ]
The SC will leave the bill intact. 24%  24%  [ 5 ]
Will what be overturned by who? 5%  5%  [ 1 ]
Total votes : 21
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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 9:06 am 
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Hopwin wrote:
Sorry for being a retard, and sorry if I have asked before but can we take a step back and can someone explain to me how this provides health care to anyone? Unless I am mistaken it just means if you don't buy it then you have to pay a tax.

The mandate was the most controversial part of the ACA, but it's just one piece. The ACA expands insurance coverage and access to / affordability of health care through a variety of mechanisms, including the following:

  • guaranteed issue (insurance companies have to take everyone, including those with pre-existing conditions)
  • partial community rating (everyone pays relatively similar premiums, regardless of their individual health status)
  • annual and lifetime coverage caps banned
  • subsidies for low-income people to buy insurance
  • young adults can stay on their parents' insurance (which is usually cheaper and better) until age 26
  • expanded eligibility for Medicaid

The problem with all that is that many people would just free-ride by not getting insurance until they were already sick, knowing that guaranteed issue and community rating would require the insurance companies to cover them whenever the time came. So, we have the mandate to prevent such free-riding and maximize the size of the risk-pool.


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 9:12 am 
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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 9:34 am 
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RangerDave wrote:
Hopwin wrote:
Sorry for being a retard, and sorry if I have asked before but can we take a step back and can someone explain to me how this provides health care to anyone? Unless I am mistaken it just means if you don't buy it then you have to pay a tax.

The mandate was the most controversial part of the ACA, but it's just one piece. The ACA expands insurance coverage and access to / affordability of health care through a variety of mechanisms, including the following:

  • guaranteed issue (insurance companies have to take everyone, including those with pre-existing conditions)
  • partial community rating (everyone pays relatively similar premiums, regardless of their individual health status)
  • annual and lifetime coverage caps banned
  • subsidies for low-income people to buy insurance
  • young adults can stay on their parents' insurance (which is usually cheaper and better) until age 26
  • expanded eligibility for Medicaid

The problem with all that is that many people would just free-ride by not getting insurance until they were already sick, knowing that guaranteed issue and community rating would require the insurance companies to cover them whenever the time came. So, we have the mandate to prevent such free-riding and maximize the size of the risk-pool.

Other than expanded Medicaid (which states can reject apparently?) this doesn't provide anyone with free health insurance then? It just means everyone has to buy it or pay a tax?

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 9:52 am 
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You missed the subsidies part, Hop. Also, it means that people who normally wouldn't be able to get insurance, because they're an incredibly BAD insurance risk (and thus would only be offered at premiums so high it's not worth it/affordable, since the insurance companies know the house is going to lose on the insurance gamble, as it were) must be offered insurance now. This is nominally offset, to the insurance companies, by the requirement that healthy people must buy insurance, thus increasing the pool of "good" bets (for the house) on the insurance gamble.

In addition, the annual and lifetime caps are banned, with an effect on expanding the coverable pool similar to the above.

Aside from the expanded Medicaid and subsidies, the AFA was never about "free" health care. It's about mandating that the insurance industry doesn't get to pick and choose its customers (something that insurance -- or the health care industry, in general, when you look at hospitals & emergency room service) needs to do to stay in business, or else raise its prices on everybody to cover the costs of the people who everybody knows won't end up paying in as much as they consume.

In order to do that, the bone thrown to the insurance industry (and hospitals) was that we can make sure they have more paying customers and fewer free-riders who unexpectedly get sick/injured without coverage, respectively, by making everybody buy insurance. As anybody in the health care industry with any economical acumen at all can tell you, the few 20-somethings who have been opting not to carry insurance aren't going to cover the astronomical costs the requirement to let everybody have access to insurance, and regulation on how steep coverage can cost, are going to incur, which will have to be made up for by the bolded part above.

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 10:16 am 
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Kaffis, how is the insurance market not going to fall apart within this model? I cannot foresee this working out well....won't private insurance companies go bankrupt or something?

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 10:19 am 
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LadyKate wrote:
Kaffis, how is the insurance market not going to fall apart within this model? I cannot foresee this working out well....won't private insurance companies go bankrupt or something?

You can see very clearly what happens if you check out Massachusetts who implemented something very similar in 2006:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massachuse ... m#Outcomes

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 10:32 am 
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Hopwin wrote:
LadyKate wrote:
Kaffis, how is the insurance market not going to fall apart within this model? I cannot foresee this working out well....won't private insurance companies go bankrupt or something?

You can see very clearly what happens if you check out Massachusetts who implemented something very similar in 2006:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massachuse ... m#Outcomes


Ok I read like half of that and the words and figures started melting together....TLDR summation?

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 10:39 am 
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LadyKate wrote:
Ok I read like half of that and the words and figures started melting together....TLDR summation?

More people get covered, but there's no free lunch, so the extra costs get spread around among the various participants in the system - employers, hospitals, insurance companies, individual plan subscribers, taxpayers, etc.


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 10:49 am 
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So is it still going to be profitable to be in the insurance business in the private sector? Or is this the beginning of a transition to govt health insurance for everyone and the eventual disappearance of private insurance?

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 10:50 am 
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LadyKate wrote:
Hopwin wrote:
LadyKate wrote:
Kaffis, how is the insurance market not going to fall apart within this model? I cannot foresee this working out well....won't private insurance companies go bankrupt or something?

You can see very clearly what happens if you check out Massachusetts who implemented something very similar in 2006:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massachuse ... m#Outcomes


Ok I read like half of that and the words and figures started melting together....TLDR summation?

it doesn't, and single payer healthcare rides in to "save the day."

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 11:10 am 
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Its still using insurance for many things that should never be used for insurance such as known costs.

You do not insure a pre-existing condition. It makes absolutely no sense to do so.

Oh you know you're going to need to take x pills every y often. Thats the same as knowing you need gas or food -so would anyone propose food or gas insurance as a good idea?

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 11:17 am 
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Food and gas insurance is a brilliant idea. It should be added to Obamacare.

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 11:20 am 
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LadyKate wrote:
So is it still going to be profitable to be in the insurance business in the private sector? Or is this the beginning of a transition to govt health insurance for everyone and the eventual disappearance of private insurance?

In the short to medium term, yes, private insurance remains profitable and sustainable. Not as profitable as before, but certainly still worthwhile. In the medium to long term, I don't think anyone really knows for sure, and predictions are usually heavily influenced by the political views of the person making the prediction. Insurance could go the way of large-scale utilities and become so highly regulated that the government essentially sets the price on a "cost plus reasonable profit" basis. Or it could split into a two-tier system where the government provides single-payer universal coverage for standard things and a wholly private market exists for "deluxe" coverage. Or we could get a system where the government provides insurance for everyone (e.g., like France). Or we could get a system where insurance largely disappears and the government just pays directly for health care (e.g., like Britain).

FWIW, my prediction is that we'll gravitate toward a combination of the two-tier standard/deluxe system and the French universal insurance system.


Last edited by RangerDave on Fri Jun 29, 2012 11:20 am, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 11:20 am 
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Corolinth wrote:
Food and gas insurance is a brilliant idea. It should be added to Obamacare.


It might be. All Catherine sebellius needs to do is wave her hand and make it happen. Kinda like Dolores umbridge

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 11:35 am 
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Thanks RD.

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 12:18 pm 
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LadyKate wrote:
So is it still going to be profitable to be in the insurance business in the private sector? Or is this the beginning of a transition to govt health insurance for everyone and the eventual disappearance of private insurance?

So far it has cost twice as much as planned and the % of uninsured hasn't dropped as much as intended. In the short-term MA Insurance rates soared much higher than the national average before levelling off to.... exactly the national average increase. http://www.forbes.com/sites/carolynmccl ... are-costs/

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 12:56 pm 
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More people between me and my doctor = higher cost. Now we've allowed people with zero accountability to be the middleman. Yeah this will work great. At least my aetna stock will be secure.

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 1:17 pm 
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It doesn't matter how much it costs..

It's good for the 'people'...


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 3:15 pm 
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LadyKate wrote:
So is it still going to be profitable to be in the insurance business in the private sector? Or is this the beginning of a transition to govt health insurance for everyone and the eventual disappearance of private insurance?


It'll be profitable as long as the insurance companies are allowed to raise their rates to remain profitable. As the crackdown on that basic quality of free enterprise had already begun to be eroded by Sebelius years ago, for example. It's pretty obvious what the intent of the Fed Gov't is.

All of the "mechanisms" that are intended to "expand insurance coverage and access to / affordability of health care" are, by the very nature of selling goods and services, going to be passed down to the consumer, the paying consumers who still remain on private insurance, and the taxpayer - whether they consume the product or not. Here are some more "expansion/accessibility mechanisms".

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 3:18 pm 
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Rynar wrote:
Again, you don't have nearly enough data to analyze the best way to administer universal healthcare, public or private, even if we only examine the problem as it exists right this very second, making no consideration of future issues that may arise. Any time you only do something one way, you have no way of knowing if it's the right way, and when that happens it almost always means it isn't. This is an awful thing when you're talking about willfully mismanaging about a third of the economy.


I'd love to know how universal private healthcare can work out even in theory. If you're talking about the government subsidizing private industry, well that's what Obamacare is. If you're talking about the government not being involved.....that just doesn't work.

The fact is, fully private health care is pretty much guaranteed to be a huge drop in the quality of care for a very simple reason: Our current health services are financed via massive borrowing. A for-profit private health care system can't be built on borrowed money. The vast majority of the population can't actually afford a 79-year life expectancy. Today, we have a system where people retire at age 65 and continue living past age 85, doing nothing productive for over 20 years. Do you know how much that costs? Medicare borrows two thirds of its budget. Very, very few seniors can afford anything else besides Medicare because the actual costs of health care in old age are just that immense. Even if privatization results in an absolutely massive increase in efficiency, it's still not likely to provide the same level of care we get now. The average cost of providing medical care for a 65 year old until death is now over $1.25 million. How many people retire with $1.25 million? Hell, how many people retire with even $500,000, let alone $500,000 to spend on health care?

Even if a theoretical private enterprise can provide the same quality of care for half the price as Medicare, it's still a huge step back in overall quality.

If you want the life expectancy in the US to be over 70, you must "rob the rich." There's no way around it. If you put this burden on the individual, you are basically telling the population that you need to be a millionaire if you want to expect to live to 75, and if you want to live to 85 you better have more than $5 million.


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 3:37 pm 
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Again, all of your (worthless) data is collected in the vacuum of a single centralized system whose internal metrics are all completely compromised by the single largest price fixing entity on the planet. Until you understand that you're standing in the center of the forest, there's no point in discussing the trees with you.

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 3:53 pm 
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Did you miss the part where I acknowledged the fact that private health care would result in a large increase in efficiency?

Just to break even, the theoretical private system would have to provide the same quality of care provided now for one fourth of the price. To make a profit, the increase in efficiency would have to be even greater.

What data do you have that indicates this kind of massive increase in efficiency is possible? Yes, I understand that government meddling inflates prices. I don't buy for a second that it's more than quadrupled them.


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 4:07 pm 
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Xequecal wrote:
Did you miss the part where I acknowledged the fact that private health care would result in a large increase in efficiency?

This is not a given by any stretch. Pretty much everything about the nature of health care makes it a bad fit for efficient market competition - there's a massive information asymmetry between supplier and consumer; delaying or foregoing purchase is often not an option; substitute products are limited or non-existent; willingness-to-pay for the most expensive care (i.e. the life-saving kind) is virtually unlimited; the ability to evaluate quality of care and compare between providers is minimal; and so on.


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 4:16 pm 
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RangerDave wrote:
Xequecal wrote:
Did you miss the part where I acknowledged the fact that private health care would result in a large increase in efficiency?

This is not a given by any stretch. Pretty much everything about the nature of health care makes it a bad fit for efficient market competition - there's a massive information asymmetry between supplier and consumer; delaying or foregoing purchase is often not an option; substitute products are limited or non-existent; willingness-to-pay for the most expensive care (i.e. the life-saving kind) is virtually unlimited; the ability to compare quality of care from one provider to the next is minimal; and so on.

Total horseshit. The more an institution or industry is bureaucratized the less efficient it becomes. There is nothing government or monopoly does more efficiently than the market.

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Last edited by Rynar on Fri Jun 29, 2012 5:56 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2012 4:20 pm 
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Rynar wrote:
Total horseshit. The more an institution or industry is buerocratized the less efficient it becomes. There is nothing government or monopoly does more efficiently than the market.

I'll take "Ideological Absolutism" for $1000, Alex.

The mechanism by which markets achieve efficiency is competition, and there are a number of factors weighing against effective competition in the market for health care, as noted in my post. A blanket statement that every market for every product that ever was or ever will be must always, by its very nature as a "market", be efficiency-maximizing is just dogmatism.


Last edited by RangerDave on Fri Jun 29, 2012 4:33 pm, edited 2 times in total.

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