December 11, 2014, 4:01 pm
We received a letter from Blue Cross / Blue Shield of AZ saying we could keep our plan, but the cost goes from about $579 a month to $739 a month in January of 2015 (a 27.6% increase). Note that this is for a pretty high deductible health plan, something like $5000. We wrote to our broker to explore options. We got this response:
Crazy as this latest BC [Blue Cross] rate increase is it is a lot better than Obamacare. I ran the same plan under the Affordable Care Act with BC and the rate for 1/1/15 would be $963.70 a month and if you went to the $6300 deductible plan the rate would still be $914 a month. So I guess we are all lucky to be out of ACA until we are forced into it. Now there is one variable that could lower your cost and that is if your household income in 2015 will be under $92k you could go into the Marketplace for premium assistance from our wonderful Federal government. If it is going to be higher than that be grateful you are where you are!
As predicted in advance, Obamacare and the exchange are not about saving money. The only people who are saving money are those getting taxpayer subsidies in the exchange.
October 31, 2013, 12:59 pm
Here is his new excuse for his "you can keep your health insurance" promise being broken. It is -- wait for it, you will never guess -- insurance companies' fault.
"One of the things health reform was designed to do was to help not only the uninsured but also the under-insured," Obama said. "And there are a number of Americans, fewer than 5 percent of Americans, who've got cut-rate plans that don't offer real financial protection in the event of a serious illness or an accident.
"Remember, before the Affordable Care Act, these bad apple insurers had free rein every single year to limit the care that you received or used minor pre-existing conditions to jack up your premiums or bill you into bankruptcy."
This is absurd. Kaiser Permanente cut zillions of policies. Are they a bad apple? My policy was cut by Blue Cross / Blue Shield of Arizona. Are they some fly-by-night cut-rate insurer?
October 29, 2013, 10:25 am
I try to read a couple of team-politics blogs from both the red and blue side, to stay in touch with what they are saying and stay out of an echo chamber. Also, of course, libertarians make common cause with both parties on various issues. But the mindless team politics angle can really be a bore.
One of the reasons I like to read Kevin Drum on the left is that his initial reactions to things often seems pretty honest. When his side really screws up, like the IRS scandal or failing Obamacare exchanges, his initial reaction will generally be to honestly critique a bad situation. And then about 3-5 days into the scandal or crisis or discussion of an issue, he will catch on to and adopt the party line on an issue and then become incredibly tedious (for example, on the IRS scandal, he was honestly critical for a while and then adopted the silly "leftish groups were equally targeted meme" and has stuck to it by rote since). But at least there are those few days of honesty, which separates him from a lot of the left and right team politics blogs.
So the timing is just about right for the Left to pick a meme to explain away the millions of people who are getting their policies cancelled despite being told that they could keep their health insurance. Mainstream outlets like CBS and NBC are pushing the story, not just right-wing and libertarian blogs, so the Ezra Klein's of the world must be working diligently to pick a meme and then enforce it. It will be interesting to see what they choose.
Update: Well, here is an early entrant from Valerie Jarrett:
FACT: Nothing in #Obamacare forces people out of their health plans. No change is required unless insurance companies change existing plans.
This is hilarious. Technically true, since my cancellation came from Blue Cross and not the government, but obviously the Blue Cross decision to cancel me was forced by the terms of the law. This is obviously absurd, but is it too absurd for the media? I don't know, and of course it gets extra lefty bonus points for blaming government-caused problems on private businesses. Next up, Exxon to blame for gasoline taxes!
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Valerie Jarrett Category:
Health Care |
2 Comments
October 22, 2013, 9:46 am
My health insurance broker wrote me this in response to our telling him we got a letter from Blue Cross (BC) terminating our policy
Did your BC letter say your policy ended 12/31/13 or 12/31/14. If it ends in 2014 I strongly suggest you stay where you are until you are forced into Obamacare which will probably raise your rates substantially.
Given that I run a small business with fluctuating earnings, my last two years tax returns show zero net income. If I had not honor, I probably could go into the exchange (if and when I could actually get into the exchange) and qualify for a large subsidy. I could also probably go uncovered, and just sign up when I get sick, and pay the penalty, which is trivial if you are showing no income on your taxes.
Does anyone know if the exchanges do a net worth or asset check? I don't see how. If they only look at taxes, I will appear dirt poor.
October 21, 2013, 10:02 pm
Blue Cross just wrote me that our current health insurance policy will not be renewable for next year. Unfortunately, I have actual health insurance rather than pre-paid medical care (meaning that it has a high deductible and pays for catastrophic things rather than aromatherapy visits). Kathleen Sebelius does not think what I have is "real insurance" so she and Obama have banned it, despite promising that if I like my health insurance I would be able to keep it.
October 3, 2007, 10:45 am
For years I had some kind of corporate health plan. When I started my own business, I bought a Blue Cross plan that roughly mirrored the corporate health plan I used to have -- very low deductible, lots of coverage. And it had very high premiums.
So I finally got serious and went out and did something 99% of Americans never do or never have to do: I went out and really researched my health care options. And what I found was that to raise our family's deductible from $500 a year to $2000 a year would save me over $3000 a year in premiums. In fact, if I switched plans, I would get just as high of a maximum payout and I would get a better gaurantee on future pricing and a commitment never to drop my coverage from a large, well-rated insurance company.
There's an old joke about an economist and another fellow walking down the street. There was a $10 bill laying on the ground, but the economist just walked right past it. The other fellow said "what are you doing, you just passed up $10." And the economist replied "It can't be a real $10 bill, because in an efficient market someone would have already picked it up."
That was my reaction to my health care options. I asked my broker, "you mean that if I increase my deductible $1500 I can save $3000 a year? Even in a worst case year I am better off, and in a healthy year I am MUCH better off." He replied "Yep." I asked, "But why doesn't everyone do this?" He just shrugged. As my Harvard investment management professor used to say, as he wrote up a market situation on the chalkboard to begin each class, either this is an opportunity, of there is something we don't understand. As I have gained more experience with my new health plan, I have become convinced it is the former.
McQ over at Q&O has a great post on insurance vs. insulation. I won't quote it all, but it is well worth your read. Towards the end, he quotes John Stoessel on my particular conundrum:
But people are so conditioned to expect others to pay their medical
bills that they hate high deductibles: They feel ripped off if they
must pay a thousand dollars before the insurance company starts paying.
But high deductibles may be the key to lowering costs and putting you in charge of your health care.
I am absolutely convinced that the best possible step for US health care is to expose more users to the market and price-value trade offs, while providing high-deductible insurance that shelters people from bankrupting unusual events. More here, here, and here.