- Obamacare requires insurance companies to sell coverage to all comers, even those with preexisting conditions. This is called "guaranteed issue."
- For this to be workable, the price of insurance has to be about the same for everyone. Otherwise insurance companies will simply set prices high enough to exclude anyone with a preexisting condition. This is called "community rating."
- If you do this, the sickest people will all queue up for insurance. Healthy people won't bother. They'll just wait until they get sick and then sign up.
- But insurance companies depend on the law of averages: they need a large pool of customers, figuring that only a certain percentage will get sick each year. If their customer base is made up almost entirely of sick people, they'll quickly go out of business. This is the death spiral.
- The answer is to make sure that insurance companies continue to have a broad pool of customers, some of whom are healthy and some fraction of whom will get sick.
- The only way to do this effectively is to require that everyone buy health insurance. This is the "individual mandate."
- Poor people can't afford this, so you have to provide tax credits to help them out. These are the "subsidies."
Thursday, July 25, 2013
Obamacare in a Nutshell
Kevin Drum has a very nice summary today of how Obamacare works. It is clear, simple, and reveals just how based in common sense the health care law is. Here are the main points.
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