See, the thing I don't get is that if the government plan is going to be so horrible, wouldn't the people who can currently afford private insurance just stay on that so insurance companies can keep making money hand over fist like they're doing now?
The landscape of the insurance industry is different than most other things. Insurance has been so super-uber-regulated that it can't, for instance, sell insurance across state lines or to individuals (only to groups, or indirectly to individuals through even more "creative accounting").
So, basically, regulation hostile to both competition and to what would normally be an inelastic demand curve has made it such as it is now. If we go into this and introduce another competitor who has the added advantage of not having to stay in the black... it's just a countdown from there.
Also, the changes in allowed business practices (things like pre-existing condition exclusions going bye-bye) will also increase costs exponentially - which the government plan will be able to absorb without raising premiums/deductibles/coinsurance/etc... but private insurance will not.
I'm not saying there aren't problems with the existing system, but we should have been addressing those problems directly instead of leaping on the fast-track to single payer.[/quote]
Fast track to single payer is very hyperbolic. It's not even single payer option. It's a government option health plan.
The reason insurance can't sell across state lines is because each state has different rules regarding health care. If these rules were not in place, an insurance company that wants to make the most profit with the least amount of restriction could set up in a state with very little restrictions. The company would be under the rules of the state they are set up in.
Really, the rules are there for YOUR protection. I don't understand why this gets blown out of proportion to act as if the insurance companies are somehow getting screwed.
I'd like to add that there is this perception of Medicare being so evil. I don't get it.