Insurance Is No Answer
John Stossel Wednesday, July 08, 2009 Health care "reformers" keep
talking about getting us more health insurance. Then they
talk about cutting costs. This is contradictory nonsense. Insurance, whether private or a
government Ponzi scheme like Medicare, means third parties pay the bills.
When someone else pays, costs always go up. Imagine if you had grocery insurance. You
wouldn't care how much food cost. Why shop around? If someone else were
paying 80 percent, you'd buy the most expensive cuts of meat. Prices would
skyrocket. That's what health insurance does to
medical care. Patients rarely even ask what anything costs. Doctors often
don't know. Often nobody even gives a damn. Patients rarely ask, "Is
that MRI really necessary? Is there a cheaper place?" We consume without
thinking. By contrast, in areas of medicine where
most patients pay their own way, service gets better, while prices fall. Take plastic surgery and Lasik eye surgery:
Because patients shop around and compare prices, doctors work hard to win
their business. They often give customers their cell-phone numbers. Service
keeps increasing, but prices don't. "In every other field of medicine,
the price is going up faster than consumer prices in general," says John
Goodman of the National Center for Policy Analysis.
"But the price of Lasik surgery, on average, has gone down by 30
percent." This shouldn't be a surprise. What holds
costs down is patients acting like consumers, looking out for themselves in a
competitive market. Providers fight to win business by keeping costs down and
quality up. Yet politicians keep telling us the
solution is more insurance. And they mean insurance not just for catastrophic
diseases that could bankrupt us but also for routine treatments. The politicians are so oblivious to
reality that they are on course to make things worse. Obama would force every
business to either give workers health insurance or pay a fine into the
public system. Why is that something we should want employers to do? Premiums
come out of our salaries, but insurers are accountable to our bosses, not to
us. Why not just have a free market where
people can buy whatever kind of health insurance they want? Competition would
then bring prices down. Obama and his Senate allies would limit
competition by requiring insurers to cover everyone for the same
"fair" price. No "cherry picking," the president says. No
charging healthy people less. They call this "community
rating," and it sounds fair. No more cruel "discrimination"
against people who have a preexisting condition, obese people or smokers. But
such simple-minded one-size-fits-all rules take from insurance companies
their best price-dampening tool: Risk-based pricing encourages people to take
better care of themselves, just as car-insurance companies reward good
drivers. With one-size pricing your car-insurance company must give the town
drunk the same deal it gives you. Insane, but the health-insurance industry
is playing along. Insurers say that if government forces everyone to have
insurance, they will accept all customers regardless of preexisting
illnesses. They also offered to stop charging higher
premiums to sick people. They're even giving up on gender differences.
Sen. John Kerry huffed,
"The disparity between women and men in the individual insurance market
is just plain wrong, and it has to change." The president of the
industry trade group, Karen M. Ignagni, agreed that disparities "should
be eliminated." Give me a break. Women pay more than men for health
insurance for good reason. Despite being healthier than men, they incur
higher costs because they go to doctors more often, and they
take more medicine. Kerry is pandering. I don't recall him
demanding that men be protected from higher
life-insurance and auto-insurance premiums. "Community rating" hides the
cost of health care. It's as destructive as ordering fire insurance companies
to charge identical premiums for wood frame and stone houses. Universal
health insurance with "no discrimination" pricing will make health
care costs rise even faster. When politicians interfere with free
markets, unintended consequences harm everyone, except the companies that
lobby hard enough to protect themselves. Is it too much to expect our rulers to
understand this? http://townhall.com/columnists/JohnStossel/2009/07/08/insurance_is_no_answer?page=full |