stokes234
Master Poster
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2010
- Messages
- 2,294
I think the OP has a fair point. It can be argued, and by many it is argued, that services and production are better handled by private industry because private industry finds more efficient ways to produce as it is motivated by profit.
However, insurance providers don't produce. They just take in money and hand back money based on calculations of risk. Private insurance companies aren't allocating resources more efficiently by providing insurance at different premiums, they are just gambling. As a result of this gambling, and the raised costs thereof, a certain amount of money is creamed off into the pockets of the super-rich.
By switching insurance over to government control, the advertising costs and the super-rich share would be removed, and quite probably administrative overheads as well, but no governmental inefficiency would arise because nothing is really being created anyway. The same checks on risk criteria could still be employed, and the same workers employed to do them, but with fewer expenses and exploits.
Deepatrax makes the point that jobs would dissapear, but those jobs are funded by inefficiency anyway. No wealth would dissapear from society, it would just cease to be transferred from those paying for insurance to those whose jobs are in the insurance industry but would be superfluous in a government equivalent. The people paying for insurance would have the money left over to pay for other goods and services and the unemployed insurance workers could move to this industry to pick up. There would be a short term skills imbalance, but this would level out.
However, insurance providers don't produce. They just take in money and hand back money based on calculations of risk. Private insurance companies aren't allocating resources more efficiently by providing insurance at different premiums, they are just gambling. As a result of this gambling, and the raised costs thereof, a certain amount of money is creamed off into the pockets of the super-rich.
By switching insurance over to government control, the advertising costs and the super-rich share would be removed, and quite probably administrative overheads as well, but no governmental inefficiency would arise because nothing is really being created anyway. The same checks on risk criteria could still be employed, and the same workers employed to do them, but with fewer expenses and exploits.
Deepatrax makes the point that jobs would dissapear, but those jobs are funded by inefficiency anyway. No wealth would dissapear from society, it would just cease to be transferred from those paying for insurance to those whose jobs are in the insurance industry but would be superfluous in a government equivalent. The people paying for insurance would have the money left over to pay for other goods and services and the unemployed insurance workers could move to this industry to pick up. There would be a short term skills imbalance, but this would level out.