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Tuesday, September 25, 2007
Our Crazy Health-Insurance System
By John Stossel
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Almost daily, we're bombarded with apocalyptic warnings about the 47 million Americans who have no health insurance. Sen. Hillary Clinton wants to require everyone to have it, big companies to pay for it and government to buy it for the poor.

That is a move in the wrong direction.

America's health-care problem is not that some people lack insurance -- it's that 250 million Americans do have it.

You have to understand something right from the start. We Americans got hooked on health insurance because the government did the insurance companies a favor during World War II. Wartime wage controls prohibited cash raises, so employers started giving noncash benefits, like health insurance, to attract workers. The tax code helped this along by treating employer-based health insurance more favorably than coverage you buy yourself. And state governments have made things worse by mandating coverage many people would never buy for themselves.

Competition also pushed companies to offer ever-more attractive policies, such as first-dollar coverage for routine ailments, like ear infections and colds, and coverage for things that are not even illnesses, like pregnancy. We came to expect insurance to cover everything.

That's the root of our problem. No one wants to pay for his own medical care. "Let the insurance company pay for it." But if companies pay, they will demand a say in what treatment is -- and is not -- permitted. Who can blame them?

And who can blame people for feeling frustrated that they aren't in control of their medical care? Maybe we need to rethink how we pay for less-than-catastrophic illnesses so people can regain control. The system creates perverse incentives for everyone. Government mandates are good at doing things like that.

Steering people to buy lots of health insurance is bad policy. Insurance is a necessary evil. We need it to protect us from the big risks -- things most of us can't afford to pay for, like a serious illness, a major car accident or a house fire.

But insurance is a lousy way to pay for things. Your premiums go not just to pay for medical care but also for fraud, paperwork and insurance-company employee salaries. This is bad for you and bad for doctors. Continued...

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About The Author
John Stossel is an award-winning news correspondent and author of Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity: Get Out the Shovel--Why Everything You Know is Wrong.
 
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Subject: Medical "insurance"
John is right on except he did not define insurance: a voluntary pooling of money to compensate a small number of those in the pool in the event of an unusual event.
He did get into it sideways with his extended car insurance.
Medical plans are actually prepaid plans that have nothing to do with the concept of insurance.
In the old days we had MAJOR MEDICAL INSURANCE. It had a high deductable and cover unusual expenses.
Dr. Robert Hawkins
Santa Barbara

Take a clear-headed look at the numbers
47 million is less than 10 percent of the country. If it's really far less because many of these people are illegal immigrants than it's more like 7 or 8 percent of the population.

Do some people who do not have insurance not have it because there is no way they can afford it? Yes. But, there are also many people in that number who are like my father-in-law, who is a millionaire (not that we ever see any of it, mind). He is uninsured because he refuses to pay premiums on a gamble that he might someday need the coverage. He carries a catastrophic policy in case of cancer or a stroke, but he funds his own health insurance through an investment portfolio he has. Should we give him tax-payer supported health insurance? No way!
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