Josh Marshall gets it right: Insurers just don't want competition
Posted on June 29th, 2009 by Jason Rosenbaum in Profits Before People|
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This won't come as the slightest surprise to those versed in health care policy issues. But I fear it's only barely permeated the health care reform debate in the country, certainly in Washington. And that's this: the opposition to a so-called 'public option' comes almost entirely from insurance companies who have developed monopolies or near monopolies in particular geographic areas. And they don't want competition.
Note, I'm not saying more competition. I'm saying any competition at all. As Zack Roth explains in this new piece 94% of the health care insurance market is now under monopoly or near-monopoly conditions — the official term of art is 'highly concentrated'. In other words, there's no mystery why insurance costs keep going up even as the suck quotient rises precipitously. Because in most areas there's little or no actual competition.
That's exactly right. As President Obama pointed out last week, the arguments used by the industry and by conservatives are illogical at best and dishonest at worst:
If private insurers say that the marketplace provides the best quality health care; if they tell us that they’re offering a good deal, then why is it that the government, which they say can’t run anything, suddenly is going to drive them out of business? That’s not logical.
They're not against the public plan because it would be bad for you and me, they just don't want the competition. Pretty self-serving, no?