10/21/2009
Good Intentions Aren't Enough with Health Care Reform
Now that the Senate Finance Committee has approved its health care bill, it’s a good time to step back and take a look at the long term consequences should its provisions be enacted into law.
The bill prohibits insurance companies from refusing coverage to people
with pre-existing conditions and from charging sick people higher
premiums. [1] It attempts to offset the costs this will impose on
insurance companies by requiring everyone to purchase coverage, which
in theory would expand the pool of paying policy holders.
However, the maximum fine for those who refuse to purchase health
insurance is $750. [2] Even factoring in government subsidies, the cost
of purchasing a plan is much more than $750. The result: many people,
especially the young and healthy, will simply not buy coverage,
choosing to pay the fine instead. They’ll wait until they’re sick to
buy health insurance, confident in the knowledge that insurance
companies can’t deny them coverage. Such a scenario is a perfect storm
for increasing the cost of health care and creating an unsustainable
mandate program.
Those driving this plan no doubt have good intentions, but good
intentions aren’t enough. There were good intentions behind the drive
to increase home ownership for lower-income Americans, but forcing
financial institutions to give loans to people who couldn’t afford them
had terrible unintended consequences. We all felt those consequences
during the financial collapse last year. Unintended consequences always
result from top-down big government plans like the current health care
proposals, and we can’t afford to ignore that fact again.
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