How a Few Private Health Insurers Are
on the Way to Controlling Health Care
The public option is
dead, killed by a handful of senators from small states who are mostly bought
off by Big Insurance and Big Pharma or intimidated by these industries' deep
pockets and power to run political ads against them. Some might say it's no
great loss at this point because the Senate bill Harry Reid came up with
contained a public option available only to 4 million people, which would have
been far too small to exert any competitive pressure on private insurers
anyway.
To provide political cover to senators who want to tell their
constituents that the intent behind a robust public option lives on, the
emerging Senate bill makes Medicare available to younger folk (age 55), and lets
people who aren't covered by their employers buy in to a system that's similar
to the plan that federal employees now have, where the federal government's
Office of Personnel Management selects from among private insurers.
But
we still end up with a system that's based on private insurers that have no
incentive whatsoever to control their costs or the costs of pharmaceutical
companies and medical providers. If you think the federal employee benefit plan
is an answer to this, think again. Its premiums increased nearly 9 percent this
year. And if you think an expanded Medicare is the answer, you're smoking
medical marijuana. The Senate bill allows an independent commission to hold back
Medicare costs only if Medicare spending is rising faster than total health
spending. So if health spending is soaring because private insurers have no
incentive to control it, we're all out of luck. Medicare explodes as well.
A system based on private insurers won't control costs because private
insurers barely compete against each other. According to data from the American
Medical Association, only a handful of insurers dominate most states. In 9
states, 2 insurance companies control 85 percent or more of the market. In
Arkansas, home to Senator Blanche Lincoln, who doesn't dare cross Big Insurance,
the Blue Cross plan controls almost 70 percent of the market; most of the rest
is United Healthcare. These data, by the way, are from 2005 and 2006. Since
then, private insurers have been consolidating like mad across the country. At
this rate by 2014, when the new health bill kicks in and 30 million more
Americans buy health insurance, Big Insurance will be really Big.
In
light of all this, you'd think the insurance industry would be subject to the
antitrust laws, so the Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission could
prevent it from combining into one or two national behemoths that suck every
health dollar out of our pockets (as well as the pockets of companies paying
part of the cost of their employees' health insurance). But no. Remarkably, the
Senate bill still keeps Big Insurance safe from competition by preserving its
privileged exemption from the antitrust laws.
From the start, opponents
of the public option have wanted to portray it as big government preying upon
the market, and private insurers as the embodiment of the market. But it's just
the reverse. Private insurers are exempt from competition. As a result, they are
becoming ever more powerful. And it's not just their economic power that's
worrying. It's also their political power, as we've learned over the last ten
months. Economic and political power is a potent combination. Without some
mechanism forcing private insurers to compete, we're going to end up with a
national health care system that's controlled by a handful of very large
corporations accountable neither to American voters nor to the
market.
posted by Robert Reich | 6:44 AM <http://robertreich.blogspot.com/2009/12/how-few-private-health-insurers-are-on.html>
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By
Robert Reich
12/10/09