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Cheap But Good Fix To Healthcare Insurance

 

Source

The Wall Street Journal  

January 25, 2005

COMMENTARY

Simple, but Effective

By DAVID GRATZER
January 25, 2005; Page A16

The health care agenda of the second Bush term is immense, and the administration can begin by pushing a simple idea that won't cost a penny from the treasury: Allow interstate sales of health insurance.

Insurance premiums vary greatly from state to state. Last month, eHealthInsurance, a leading online insurance brokerage, compared the cost of a standard family insurance policy ($2,000 deductible with a 20% co-insurance) across the nation's 50 largest cities, involving some 4,000 insurance plans and 140 insurance companies. Some results are startling. Consider: a non-employer-based family policy for four in Kansas City, Mo., costs about $170 per month while similar coverage in Boston tops more than $750 a month. Unpublished data on the small group market -- which serves smaller companies -- also suggests great variability: Similar HMO coverage for a business in New Jersey is a third more per employee than in California.

Why the price difference? Many states dictate the type of services and providers. New York, for instance, requires that the services of a podiatrist be covered. It's a commonly quoted statistic that the average person walks about 150,000 miles in a lifetime. Let's hope the majority of this journey is on healthy, bunion-free feet. But should every insurance policy in the Empire State really be required to include podiatric services? Acupuncturists are mandated in 11 states, massage therapists in four, osteopaths in 24, and chiropractors in 47, driving up the price of even the most basic insurance plans.

Some states have gone further. Laws force insurers to sell to any applicant (guaranteed issue) and at the same price, regardless of age or health (community rating). Faced with higher premiums for insurance they seldom use, the young and healthy drop their coverage, leaving an insurance pool of older, sicker people -- and even higher premiums. After a decade of such political meddling, the average monthly cost of a family policy in New Jersey bests the monthly lease of a Ferrari. In such an environment, many insurance carriers choose not to do business; in Vermont, for example, just three companies sell to the individual market.

The consequences:

 Higher premiums. The regulatory burden means, in effect, a massive health tax for citizens in dozens of states. This hidden tax unfairly discriminates against the self-employed, as well as small and mid-sized companies. Large corporations, after all, aren't forced to follow state mandates (many self-insure); some spend two-thirds less than the national average on heath coverage per employee by using no-frills plans.
 
 More uninsured. It makes sense that the higher the premium, the more people will opt out of buying insurance. The CBO estimates that every 1% increase in insurance cost results in 200,000 to 300,000 more uninsured.
 
 Reduced labor mobility. In a recent study, University of Wisconsin economist Scott Adams demonstrates that 20% to 30% of non-elderly men choose to stay put at jobs with health benefits. No wonder: Since potential employers may not offer insurance and individual policies are so pricey (especially in cities like New York and Boston), labor mobility suffers.
 
 

A remedy? Some suggest massive tax credits and other subsidies, an unlikely possibility in light of the budget deficit. An alternative would be to allow out-of-state purchases of health insurance. The federal McCarran-Ferguson Act of 1945 empowers states to regulate "the business of insurance." Nothing prevents Congress, however, from allowing interstate sales. The foundation of such a bill would be the Constitution's Commerce Clause. Individuals and small businesses would then be able to shop around and find a low-cost policy -- an affirmation of free-market principles since interstate restrictions now leave many Americans at the mercy of a small number of local health insurance carriers.

Allowing a competitive market for health insurance won't be a major budgetary expense -- but it may prove priceless to the cause of advancing market reforms to better American health care.

Dr. Gratzer, a physician, is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute.

URL for this article:
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110661643244934843,00.html

 
 
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