Posted on 01/11/2014 4:37:41 PM PST by SeekAndFind
We are becoming increasingly concerned about momentum that is quickly building among some leading conservatives for elimination of the risk corridor and reinsurance programs, [Blue Cross Blue Shield Association CEO Scott] Serota wrote…
Their efforts, along with growing support for repealing the risk corridor and reinsurance programs, could combine to create a perfect storm to, at a minimum, dissuade the Administration from modifying risk corridor program rules to provide increased funding in light of the recent transitional policy allowing insurers to offer consumers the option to renew their 2013 health plans for 2014, Serota wrote.
In attached talking points, seemingly directed at Republican lawmakers opposed to risk corridors and reinsurance, BCBSA is asking members to argue that eliminating the risk corridors will lead to the eventual downfall of Obamacare and lead to a single-payer system: It jeopardizes the entire private health insurance market and will ultimately lead to a single-payer system. Furthermore, it will close the door to pro-competitive health care reform alternatives.
One bolded talking point, use with appropriate audiences only, charges that eliminating these programs will result in massive premium increases and could cause private insurers to become insolvent. In Serotas email, however, this point is intended for Democrats only.
You remember the “risk corridor” provisions, right? If a new ObamaCare plan comes in under budget, the insurer pays the difference between the actual cost and projected cost to HHS. If it comes in over budget, HHS pays the difference to the insurance. It’s a way for insurers to spread risk among the industry with HHS as middleman. (The bit in the excerpt about the White House modifying the rules for its new “transitional policy” is a reference to this.) Problem is, there’s no cap on how much HHS might need to pay out if lots and lots of plans come in over budget — a plausible scenario given the whispers from Humana about what it’s seeing among the demographic mix of ObamaCare enrollees so far. If too many plans have lopsided numbers of sick enrollees who need expensive treatments and few healthy ones to supply the revenue needed to offset that expense, HHS could be on the hook for the shortfall via a de facto bailout — unless Congress repeals the risk corridor provisions, in which case the insurers will be stuck with the bill. How many of them will be able to cover it and how many will go belly up? Of the ones who stay in business, how many will have to charge exorbitant premiums next year to make up for their losses? And if premiums soar, some portion of their consumers are bound to cancel their plans, which means even less revenue for the insurers and the need for even higher premiums, etc. That’s the “death spiral,” and in theory that’s where single-payer comes in. If the insurance industry melts down because Congress cut its financial lifeline, what replaces it?
What’s fascinating about the BCBS talking points is that, in light of the rumblings on the left lately about single-payer, they may actually hurt the industry at this point more than they help. The “single-payer” talk won’t scare Republicans; they know they’re likely to have more control of Congress next year, not less, and they’re eager to find a weak spot in the Jenga tower that is ObamaCare that might bring the whole thing down. Killing the risk corridor could do it. Meanwhile, the “single-payer” talk might entice Democrats. Plenty of them, like Michael Moore and Noam Scheiber, defend ObamaCare not out of love but out of dutiful partisan obligation. They hate insurance companies and would leap at the chance to replace them with a government alternative but they’re stuck with the O-Care model for the time being. If the industry implodes, though, they’ll have a fully-formed alternative ready to go in the form of “Medicare for all.” And of course, as a matter of basic retail politics, Democrats want to be seen as anti-bailout as much as Republicans do, especially before a midterm election. Even assuming that Obama would veto a bailout repeal in the name of protecting his new partners in the industry, there’ll be intense political pressure on Democrats to cross the aisle and vote with the GOP to override it. I don’t think they’d get to 67 votes — the wound to ObamaCare, on which they’ve already spent so much political capital, would be too grave to inflict it so soon — but the politics of it would be attractive and we already know that they’re not averse to short-sighted political “fixes” to the law that actually make the industry’s adverse-selection problems worse. Between nervous red-state centrists like Mark Pryor who want to signal their unhappiness with O-Care and ideological leftists like Bernie Sanders who want to smash the insurance industry, how many Democratic votes might they get? Enough to get to 60 and force an Obama veto at least, right?
Exit question via Bob Laszewski: What happens when the “risk corridor” expires in 2017? Exit answer: Maybe nothing. By that point, U.S. health insurance will be so dominated by the exchanges and the penalty for not complying with the mandate will be so steep that you’ll have no choice but to sign up and pay what they want.
And THEY lived in la-la land.
Well guess what, the USA is not some magic cash cow! It operates by capitalist principles!
Unless we have the capability of independently rewriting formerly-evolved insurance law from scratch, and I don’t think so at this scale, the Blues are going to have to be part of the solution. Because if they do not cooperate, they will surely be singing the blues.
Boo-hoo. Put all these traitors out of business. They and Big Pharma crawled in bed with the Democrat dogs and now they have fleas.
You can’t tell me that doctors and hospital administrators aren’t bright enough to find a Plan B to keep from being government lackeys, practicing ObamaCare without a peep.
That won't work with decent people, only democrats. As a productive person, I would be happy to see those including Blue Cross who tried to benefit from crony capitalism pay the price of their corruption. I have no sympathy for any company that dies of stupidity while trying to rip me off.
Just as Sarbanes-Oxley was written by Big Corporate for Big Corporate, just as Dodd-Frank was witten by Big Banksters for Big Banksters, 0bamacase was written by Big Insurance, and Big Insurance was intended to be the beneficiary.
This isn't a "discussion:" it's a war plan for their lobbyists to make sure the law they wrote gets enforced the way they intended it.
They know the opposition well. They know the Republicans are led by a bunch of cowardly inarticulate backbiting boobs who are pretty much totally focused on lining their pockets, getting even with their personal enemies (99% of whom are also Republicans), and getting positive mentions in the MSM. Which never happens.
For a private company to threaten the Democrats as a party, and name them as a party, would be suicidal.
But BC/BS knows perfectly well that they need fear no reprisals from thr Republicans.
Bend over taxpayers — here it comes
you are correct. however, I don’t think we will have to wait till 2017.
Of course, if relatively few people sign up to begin with, they won't be as profitable as they eventually will be, but to tide them over until full participation kicks in, they need a bailout. Unbelievable.
Of course, if we move to a one payer system due to the exorbitant fees of this law, the poor insurance companies will want their bailout then as well. Unbelievable.
They're just pissed because their scam isn't going as well as they predicted.
Idiots.
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The insurance industry let greed get the best of them. They made a calculated decision to collude with the devil, thinking they would reap huge profits with a swollen base of new members. Yuri Bezmonov had a name for these stupid enablers “Useful Idiots.” When the Communist get what they want or need from the useful idiots, they throw them under the bus. That is why it is hard to feel sorry for the money grubbing fools. However, what needs to be done is immediately kill or scrap Obamacare and put the free market to work to quickly rebuild a private insurance industry.
Insurance Companies were made GSE’s by ObamaCare.
Unless of course, they don’t survive a civil war. In which case they won’t.
Antonio Gramsci’s theories utterly require that armed opposition not arise early and with serious resolve. If that happens it has no counter. His thinking lacked the depth of Bismark and Von Clausewitz.
They weren't. I worked for one of the biggest Blues while this debacle was being pushed through DC and they fought against it tooth and nail. While there, I also sat on on doctor/board meetings. No one ... doctor or insurer ... wanted this thing passed.
I wouldn't trust myself to express my thoughts on the matter.
Ultimately I blame the people. Since 2007 it's been frustrating trying to open anyone's eyes who would even listen to the true nature of this guy. You didn't need to be a Nobel scholar in history to figure out where this thing was going.
Wrong. See my previous post.
Anyone who is only willing to rely on the ballot box is are not made of the same stuff as the founders. Freedom has a price that must be paid, and those who will not pay it do not deserve it anyway.
Everything will lead to single payer unless Congress kills the whole socialist enterprise, and then unless the kenyan doesn’t simply ignore Congress and do what he means to do.
The big difference here is that the prodigal son repented. Contrast that with the insurance companies who having squandered their inheritance are returning home to demand more of their father's money.
The wonderful thing about making everything Medicaid is it eliminates Inheritance. The government seizes everyone’s estate at death to “repay” Medicaid expenses.
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