It is really
rather simple really. A medical
insurance scheme engineered to serve only the top third of the population
cannot be spread out to cover the other two thirds without having the
government in the position of paying for the other two thirds which it manifestly
cannot do.
I simply do not
understand just how the insurance industry thought that they could extend their
privilege model over the whole population without providing an effective
guaranteed wage for everyone. So this
writer is quite right. There is only one
solution that delivers universal health coverage. A mandated regulated provider just like the power
company.
It is not
perfect, and will never be perfect. Yet
it is possible to introduce serious competition into such a model as well. The first level of competition is to ensure
the States operate it with the federal level been a partial co pay. The second is to allow doctors to charge a
service premium to those who want rapid service and to use that revenue to
support additional services. It works in
Europe quite well.
This provides an
over capitalized system that still remains affordable for everyone. It is amazing how much dead capital gets
built up in such a scenario. Everyone
wants their own MRI machine.
How Obamacare
Could Lead to Single Payer Sooner Than You Think
By Staff Report - January 21, 2014
Obamacare At 'Significant' Risk of 'Death Spiral,'
Economist Warns ... Economist John Goodman, who warned last October that
Obamacare could plunge into a "death spiral" if not enough young,
healthy people signed up for coverage, says that danger is now
"significant" following news that the Obama administration failed to
hit its young adult enrollment target. "I think there is a significant
problem here," Goodman, president and CEO of the National Center for
Policy Analysis (NCPA), told CNSNews.com. – CNS News
Dominant Social Theme: We'll get it right. We
just need to do some tinkering.
Free-Market Analysis: Reading this article, we
realized how the ol' switcheroo could take place that would shove Obamacare
into a kind of "single payer" mode. It's not so hard to project – and
it could happen sooner than any of us think, apparently.
Of course, such analysis could be looked on as
"paranoid" or conspiratorial, but we're well past labels when we look
at what's going on in the West. Maximum complexity has been reached, in our
view. And not just complexity, but deviousness, authoritarianism ... in fact,
whatever negative characteristics you can attribute to Western institutions are
either in playor
feasible.
That's what bigness does. And the current system of
Western corporatism (fascism)
loves bigness because bigness does three things. It imbues corrupt and
incompetent facilities with an aura of inevitability and expertise;\, it allows
the authors and controllers of these facilities to retain anonymity and, most
importantly, it continually consolidates power.
Maximum bigness supports maximum deviousness. Those
who put Obamacare together
– and there was no reason for this tortuous exercise in faux-capitalism –
certainly hoped that it would give way to single-payer socialism.
But what if the system was not merely badly implemented and incompetently
created? ... No, what if the system had actually been cleverly designed to
collapse in on itself in such a way as to produce the hoped-for outcome?
That's what this article seems to suggest. If,
indeed, Obamacare does not provide insurer solvency by means of its
"exchanges" then apparently the federal government will have to
ensure that the system functions.
And once the feds are involved, there will likely be
FURTHER consolidation because the feds will be footing the bill. And he who
pays makes the rules ...
Here's more from this eye-opening article:
"I think the insurers are worried. I think the
administration is worried. "Remember, everybody is facing the wrong price.
And sick people are facing a price that's well below the cost of their care.
Young healthy people are being overcharged. And so they need lots of young
healthy people to join so they can get the money to pay the bills for the sick
people.
And the younger people just aren't buying it.
"Part of the problem, I think, is that it's been so difficult for people
to sign up,
and so the only ones who've persevered – sometimes trying a hundred times – are
people who really have serious health problems."
A death spiral - the insurance pool equivalent
of bankruptcy -
occurs when too many older and sicker people sign up for insurance relative to
the number of younger, healthier people, Goodman explained, forcing everybody's
premiums up.
But as premiums rise, even less young people sign up
for coverage. "That's what we're seeing so far," Goodman told
CNSNews.com. "Over half of all the people who enrolled are above the age
of 45, and older people are more expensive [to insure]. We're also seeing 20
percent of the people who are enrolling are going for the gold or platinum
plans. Those people tend to be sick. They're buying the more comprehensive
plans because they plan to use a lot of health care."
... When CNSNews.com asked Goodman how Americans
would know if the system was crashing, he replied: "Well, there won't be
any neon signs that say 'Death Spiral Underway,' but what you'll see is
premiums keep rising, and if premiums keep rising, then fewer healthy people
will buy in and we may get to a point where you need government subsidies to
prop the whole thing up. By that I mean government subsidies to the insurance
companies."
CNSNews.com asked Goodman whether he agreed with
Washington Post columnist Ezra Klein, who argues that "the risk of a
'death spiral' is over." He replied: "Well, no, and it turns out that
80 percent of all the people who signed up so far are getting subsidies. Well,
they need lots of people who have higher incomes and who aren't going to get
subsidies. And if those people are unwilling to pay the high premiums that are
being charged, then they're in trouble. ...Everybody is worried, and no one's
keeping the fact that they're worried a secret," Goodman added.
Notice Goodman harps on the "worry" – as
in those who put together this monstrous, devious botch are really concerned
about the end user. We find that hard to believe, though certainly all
concerned will try to keep up pretenses.
The more important information in this article lies
in the statement that "we may get to a point where you need government
subsidies to prop the whole thing up. By that I mean government subsidies to
the insurance companies."
Millions of words have already been written about
how Obamacare is unstable and could eventually fall apart. But what if its
creators intended that? What if the instability and incompetent rollout was
entirely intentional? What if this ongoing disaster leaves no other option but
a federal takeover?
Sure, there'd be wailing and gnashing of teeth, but
at the end of the day, if necessary, fedgov would step in and prop up the
system, just as Goodman predicts. And thus, in one proverbial swoop, the entire
insurance industry – already fatally compromised by its support of this
boondoggle – would find itself federalized.
Neat, huh?
Now, one can point out potential difficulties with
this scenario, starting with the intentions of the insurers that supported
Obamacare. But one has to recall in this age of corporatism that several Swiss
academics did a study that found that the ultimate control of the West's myriad
corporations resided in only about 150 mega-corporations. Of course, we would
take that control even further. Via various private trusts and anonymous
shareholding it is surely possible that those 150-plus corporations are even
more consolidated.
The point is, there is plenty of pressure from
various internationalist groups and individuals to continue to consolidate the
production of Western goods and services. And much of the bankroll for this
enterprise comes from the apparent control of central banking.
The fabulous riches of money printing have surely helped inordinately with the
current consolidation.
And, thus, there is every reason to believe that
while US insurers seem to act "independently," their top men actually
follow orders of those even higher up in the corporate hierarchy.
Nothing else makes sense. The insurance companies
that cooperated with the Obama administration have likely slit their collective
throat. Are we supposed to believe that the high-priced management of these
companies didn't foresee the current scenario? They didn't understand that the
jaws of Leviathan could
certainly grind down on them once they had placed themselves in a position to
be appropriately macerated?
Much of what we are reading about Obamacare doesn't
make any sense. Here is a system that was so badly botched that even now it
doesn't include the most rudimentary safety features to prevent hacking of
sensitive user data. And when the system was rolled out, it apparently didn't
work at ALL.
Now it turns out that the system's setup was a
gamble on numerous fronts. Most obviously and incomprehensibly, a certain level
of participation was supposed to be reached by those who have the least reason
to involve themselves.
We figure it won't be long before the cry goes up
in Washington DC that
youngsters not participating in this system ought to be penalized in some way.
This sort of coercion, too, were it to take place, would seem to indicate to us
that Obamacare had irretrievably set off down the road toward "single
payer."
Conclusion
And what of Obama, himself? He doesn't have to do
anything but look concerned – and play more golf. And take the heat. Maybe
that's the real definition of his job.
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