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Insurance Costs Going Up? Let’s Raise Them More

Thursday, July 16th, 2009 By Marc Kilmer

The headline in the Columbus Dispatch trumpets Governor Strickland’s talking points that more people will gain health coverage because of a variety of new regulations in the state budget. A more accurate headline would have indicated that these changes will actually raise health insurance rates in Ohio, leading to more Ohioans going without insurance.

By imposing government price caps on how much insurance can charge those who have pre-existing conditions, legislators and the governor have mandated that everyone pay more for insurance. People with pre-existing conditions are guaranteed to cost insurance companies a lot of money, almost certainly more money that these individuals pay in premiums. Insurance companies must pay for that coverage by raising the rates for everyone else.

The Dispatch story goes on to discuss how rates for health insurance premiums are increasing dramatically. The regulations being celebrated in this article are a huge part of why premiums are going up. It’s unfortunate that the reporter didn’t make this elementary connection.

As the article also points out, many of the uninsured are young adults. Let’s consider why a young adult wouldn’t want to buy insurance. For one, young adults are a pretty healthy group. They don’t go to doctors or use health care as much as older people. So they have less need for insurance than others. Two, with insurance rates going up, it costs a lot to pay for that insurance. So healthy people don’t want to pay a lot for something they have little chance of using? Makes sense to me (and it did when I was a twenty-year-old and I decided I wasn’t going to purchase health insurance. As a result, I went without for two years). The only way to tempt these people into paying for insurance is to keep its cost down. Too bad the governor and General Assembly didn’t do that.

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