Unabogie
Philosopher
Full text here:
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/113/s1642/text
Basically it provides that anyone who has a health insurance policy can keep it as long as the insurer offers such policies. On the whole, I support the idea. Although I have a few concerns about the wording.
1. Wouldn't this basically mandate that those insurance companies continue offering these policies even if they weren't making money? And isn't that actually controlling the health care market in a way that even the ACA doesn't?
2. Is this really an improvement? After all, the plans being cancelled are some of the worst plans out there or they wouldn't be cancelled. Is it better to offer this choice?
3. What will this do to the actuarials? Will it disrupt the expectations and cause the ACA to be less successful that it otherwise would be?
On the plus side, I think that most people who are on these crap plans will wean themselves off over time, and this bill says that only plans currently in effect are saved, which basically just staves off Obamacare for a bit more. It just eases the transition.
So on the whole, I'm not opposed to it, although I think it needs tweaking. And I mainly would support it so that the people whinging about "cancelled plans!!!!!!" would shut up while the rest of the country enrolls in the better coverage.
Lastly, what we really need to fix "rate shock" is a public option and/or price controls to lower the overall cost to get more in line with the rest of the world. There's no reason we should pay twice as much as everyone else for the same thing. And more generous subsidies, paid for by drastic cuts in military spending and making the wealthy pay the same tax rate as the rest of us.
Thoughts?
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/113/s1642/text
Basically it provides that anyone who has a health insurance policy can keep it as long as the insurer offers such policies. On the whole, I support the idea. Although I have a few concerns about the wording.
1. Wouldn't this basically mandate that those insurance companies continue offering these policies even if they weren't making money? And isn't that actually controlling the health care market in a way that even the ACA doesn't?
2. Is this really an improvement? After all, the plans being cancelled are some of the worst plans out there or they wouldn't be cancelled. Is it better to offer this choice?
3. What will this do to the actuarials? Will it disrupt the expectations and cause the ACA to be less successful that it otherwise would be?
On the plus side, I think that most people who are on these crap plans will wean themselves off over time, and this bill says that only plans currently in effect are saved, which basically just staves off Obamacare for a bit more. It just eases the transition.
So on the whole, I'm not opposed to it, although I think it needs tweaking. And I mainly would support it so that the people whinging about "cancelled plans!!!!!!" would shut up while the rest of the country enrolls in the better coverage.
Lastly, what we really need to fix "rate shock" is a public option and/or price controls to lower the overall cost to get more in line with the rest of the world. There's no reason we should pay twice as much as everyone else for the same thing. And more generous subsidies, paid for by drastic cuts in military spending and making the wealthy pay the same tax rate as the rest of us.
Thoughts?