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Obamacare could triple your insurance premiums

Today's Wall Street Journal has an article on an actuarial assessment by WellPoint, Inc., provider of such health insurance as Blue Cross and Blue Shield, of private insurance costs under Obamacare.


At the request of Congressional delegations worried about their constituents--call it a public service--WellPoint mined its own actuarial data to model ObamaCare in the 14 states where it runs Blue Cross plans. The study therefore takes into account market and demographic differences that other industry studies have not, such as the one from the trade group America's Health Insurance Plans, which looked at aggregate national trends.

In all of the 14 states WellPoint scrutinized, ObamaCare would drive up premiums for the small businesses and individuals who are most of WellPoint's customers. (Other big insurers, like Aetna, focus on the market among large businesses.) Young and healthy consumers will see the largest increases--their premiums would more than triple in some states--though average middle-class buyers will pay more too.

Not even two hours after Wellpoint had presented its materials on the Hill, Democrats were already trashing it--which, considering that it runs to some 238 pages and took weeks to prepare, must have required remarkable powers of digestion and analysis.

In fact, what distinguishes the Wellpoint study is its detailed rigor. Take Ohio, where a young, healthy 25-year-old living in Columbus can purchase insurance from WellPoint today for about $52 per month in the individual market. WellPoint's actuaries calculate the bill will rise to $79 because Democrats are going to require it to issue policies to anyone who applies, even if they've waited until they're sick to buy insurance. Then they'll also require the company to charge everyone nearly the same rate, bringing the premium to $134. Add in an extra $17, since Democrats will require higher benefit levels, and a share of the new health industry taxes ($6), and monthly premiums have risen to $157, a 199% boost.

Meanwhile, a 40-year-old husband and wife with two kids would see their premiums jump by 122%--to $737 from $332--while a small business with eight employees in Franklin County would see premiums climb by 86%.

[...]

Democrats have been selling health care as one huge free lunch in which everyone gets better insurance while paying less. But the policy facts simply don't add up, and Democrats are attacking WellPoint because they don't want anyone to understand what their health-care schemes will mean in practice. Democrats know that if the public is given the facts and the time to consider them, Americans might demand that Democrats stop pushing the country off this cliff and start all over.

Comments

The Dems are not the slightest bit interested in improving the healthcare system in the USA because they have not and will not tackle the biggest drivers of increasing costs - torts and insurance mandates. It wouldn't hurt to be able to buy insurance across state lines either. I also believe that increasing the number of medical schools would be a help as well. I don't think there is a shortage of qualified pre-med graduates, just slots for them in med school.

This is a transparent grab for power and, if successful, will ruin the greatest health delivery system in the world and probably bankrupt the country. WAKE UP, PEOPLE!

You're right, Betsy. I think the President and Congress are taking advantage of public concern over existing (government-created) problems: the lack of portability for employer-provided plans and the related problem of coverage for preexisting conditions.

Ramesh Ponnuru had a great article on these concerns in the August 24, 2009 issue of National Review entitled "Adam Smith for Sick People". Unfortunately, it's not available online to non-subscribers. I'll have to do a blog post that excerpts Ramesh's article.

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Donald W. Roberts
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