health insurance rate increases
Stop Praising Health Insurers For Raising Rates "Just A Little"
September 26, 2017
Steady,
Still, you may be thinking that a slowdown in health insurance premium growth is good news or you may be thinking, what's the harm in saying things are better than usual. Where to start?
First, news of lower than usual health insurance premium increases applies mostly to large employers. Smaller employers will continue to see rate increases in or approaching double digits. Second, these "slight" rate increases are made possible by already overinflated health insurance rates. Individual premiums for some small group health plans can be as high as $700 to $1,000 per month, based on benefits covered and cost-sharing structures (e.g., deductibles, coinsurance and copays). These rates are higher than the exchange rates.
But the number one reason we should not celebrate lower than usual group health insurance premiums is that it gives a false impression that we are controlling health insurance and health care costs. That employer groups have finally figured out how to win at the health care negotiating table. That health insurance companies are more accurately predicting risks and passing on the savings to their employer groups. That workplace health insurance is a bargain and operates like a fine-tuned machine, not in need of reform. That health insurance prices are not something we need to address, at least not right now. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Steady Rates or A Red Flag
There is no reason to believe that health insurance costs are under control or are a minor issue in the whole health care reform debate. The cost of health insurance (and health care) is the debate. Health insurance prices are too high and individuals can't determine the value of their policies.
Also, if health insurance was becoming such a bargain, why don't health insurers share price and discount information with the public or employer groups? If insurers are paying providers four, five or six times the Medicare rate for medical services and receive a 50% discount on less, that's no bargain. And if insurers charge a little less to access these inflated, low discount rates, why give them a pat on the back? Continue Reading...
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