My Premiums Only Went Up 15% This Year, So Obama Says I’m Doing Great
Well, we got ours today, so to speak. Our health insurance plan is coming up for renewal and we got our rate increase notification.
It’s only a 15% hike. Only 15%. Only about five times consumer inflation.
Sigh.
A lot of people have gotten it a lot worse, obviously, as the private health insurers that we may shortly be forced to patronize gouge the end consumer to line their pockets.
Still, as we all know by now, under the Obama-Senate health plan, costs aren’t going down. No matter how much free market economagic Ezra Klein believes in, or how many chickens Jonathon Gruber sacrifices to the great Gods of Capitalism, hard data tells us the truth: they’re only going up.
The Exchange will not bring down costs, nor your premiums, at least not for long. They will continue to go up. Period.
Oh, and that plan that Obama rolled out for an Insurance Rate Overseer? The Devil’s definitely in the details on that one:
The legislation would call on the secretary of health and human services to work with state regulators to develop an annual review of rate increases, and if increases are deemed “unjustified” the secretary or the state could block the increase, order the insurer to change it, or even issue a rebate to beneficiaries.
The new rate board would be composed of seven members, including consumer representatives, an insurance industry representative, a physician and other experts like health economists and actuaries, the White House said. The board’s annual report would offer guidance to the public and states on whether rate increases should be approved.
That’s right. An unelected board composed of people like Jonathon Gruber, insurance execs and actuaries, along with some token ‘consumer representatives’, will be charged with overseeing future rate increases.
Their carefully considered advice can then be summarily ignored by the Secretary, but hey. I’m sure everything will just work out. Unelected and unaccountable boards always do such a good job; I’m just overflowing with confidence.
It’s not like our government is in the business of cutting secret backroom deals with powerful players in the health industry. Surely they will be good partners, err, stewards, of the insurance industry.