Night Strike wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:I really don't understand why you say this. The current bill does require the insurance companies to offer minimum levels of insurance. The public plan is offered as a "baseline" minimum policy. Most people will pay premiums for that policy, if they select it, but those who are below certain income levels will be subsidized or get it free.
Actually, this is exactly where the public option will eventually drive private insurance out of business. The bill sets forth a health panel that will decide what the minimum coverage would be. Nothing is set in place to stop the panel from slowly ratcheting up the amount of items that are considered minimal requirements. Since the public option won't have to run for a profit, they can continue providing these minimums while fining insurance companies who do not have the capital to provide the funding for more minimums. This year the basics could include primary care, neo-natal care, mammograms, prostate exams, and outpatient minor surgeries. 3 years from now the minimum could require genetic testing, advanced cancer care, and abortion. There are no caps on what the panel can set as a minimum.
That won't happen. There will always be a market for the private companies. Look at the UK, we have universal healthcare but the private compannies still have 15% of the market. The USA is not going to have universal healthcare, and there is no way the public option will ever be nearly as big as the NHS due to the way it is going to be structured.