[QUOTE="tycoonmike"]
[QUOTE="-Sun_Tzu-"]The the government shouldn't control our lives, and it is quite the stretch to suggest that an individual insurance mandate is anything of the sort. It's about as much "control" and police and the fire dept. An individual mandate protects peoples lives. Are you suggesting that an individual mandate + a public option is worse than just an individual mandate? And are you suggesting that a public option would RAISE private insurance premiums? That makes zero sense. And who gives a damn if the private insurance companies don't make as much in profits? No way should people go without insurance just because it might take away from private insurance profits, especially considering the fact that tens of thousands of people in the U.S. die every single year just in the name of those same exact profits.-Sun_Tzu-
Yes I am, because if it is as inexpensive as the Democrats claim it will be and can still provide a similar level of health care as the private insurers, it's better than even money that people will switch to the government plan, thereby RAISING the premiums of those still on private health care. That's business: the fewer people buying a good or service in a competitive market means a higher price for those who still buy that product. Yes, people die because of those profits, but like it or not that's business. They are in the business of risk assessment. I don't like it anymore than you do, to be sure, but like it or not we will not be able to afford the worst case scenario: every single man, woman, and child in America being under a government-run health care plan. You cannot honestly say to me that, if given the choice between a government plan on the cheap and an equivalent, yet more expensive, private plan you would choose the private plan.
Would you rather have people defaulting on even basic plans they cannot afford and then dying? Who would you blame then, the company or the idiotic regulatory committees that would, and will, come about because of the plan given in the article? Yes, it is sad that tens of thousands die in the name of those profits. More people may mean smaller premiums in the short, but it means in the long run far more payouts from the company to those people who are covered, which will induce the companies to increase their rates to keep above a certain profit margin. That's capitalism, and no amount of altruism will change it.
Dude, no that's completely wrong. If people are leaving your product for another product due to price, why in the world would you raise the price of your product even further? What kind of incentive does that give your costumers to stay with your product? If there is shrinking demand for your product you do what any rational business man would do, and you would lower your prices. You don't exacerbate the shrinking in demand of your product by raising your prices - such an action would be suicidal. That's basic, basic econ 101.And in no other developed country do tens of thousands of people die at the mercy of insurance companies. No where else in the developed world does anyone go bankrupt because of medical costs. And yet the U.S. is wealthier than many of those same developed countries.
Anywhere else, the deaths of tens of thousands of individuals would be rightly referred to as genocide. If in the U.S. that genocide is called "capitalism", I'll gladly advocate for it to be stopped.
OK, so they lower their prices. How do you suppose they'll do that? I can guarantee that in order to cut costs they won't do the sensible thing and cut out the bureaucracy. That's what makes the high executive jobs so cushy: they have inflated bureaucracies to do everything for them. Instead, they'll cut coverage, thereby driving more people away.
It's a no-win situation: either they cut costs by cutting coverage, thereby driving more people away, or they raise premiums, thereby driving more people away. You honestly think executives would be willing to cut into their own paychecks and cushions to keep their company afloat? If anything, the whole "bonuses for bankers" issue over the past several months should disprove that. Either way, the private insurers are screwed in the long run if there should arise a government-funded option.
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