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    Calvin Woodward: Insurance Industry Whore Or The Biggest Insurance Industry Whore At The AP?

    Getting prominent play all over the net and all over the nation today is AP's latest contribution to distorting the issues in the healthcare debate.  Today's distorted, one-sided and thoroughly misleading insurance industry propaganda piece was written by someone named Calvin Woodward.  The article is running under the misleading heading "Fact Check" on Yahoo.  It can be found here:

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091026/ap_on_bi_ge/us_fact_check_health_insurance

    A better heading for the article should have been "Selective Fact Check".  In it, whore Woodward puts forward the industry argument that health insurance companies do not, in fact, make obscene profits.  We all know how badly maligned the health insurance companies are don't we?  You remember them don't you?  They are the heartless assholes that routinely find reasons not to pay insurance claims so they can just keep their heads above water and stay in business right?  They are the people driving a million American families every year into bankruptcy because they can't pay the medical bills and most of them have insurance.  So we all recognize just how unfairly the insurance industry has been treated when critics point out that the profits they make are obscene.

    First, let me be clear, the fact that they are profiting AT ALL is obscene and immoral, but let's set that aside for the moment.

    Whore Woodward claims on behalf of his patrons in the insurance industry that when one compares the percentage of profit the health insurance parasites reap annually to other industries they don't reall make all that much.  In point of fact, Whore Woodward insists that the profits of the parasites, far from being obscene, are quite modest.

    This is, of course, just what one would expect of a whore and particularly a cheap whore who performs the service the client wants for no quid pro quo but simply to foist their own poorly informed opinion on the public.  Anyone with half a lick of sense knows that comparing the percentage of profit of one industry to another is a completely bogus comparison.  Exxon tried to put forth the same dodge when it was racking up record profits just a couple of years ago.  Despite the billions they were raking in just on profit the rapacious oil company tried to claim that because the percentage of profit vs all the money they took in wasn't all that high, that somehow they were then not gouging consumers worldwide.  In that case, as in the present case, since they were sitll in the midst of screwing the public, the public wasn't dumb enough to believe such transparent bullshit.

    Whore Woodward claims on behalf of the insurance parasites that compared to other industries the percentage of profits just aren't that big and so the profits couldn't be obscene!  So let's look at just a few insurance companies and the proft they made last year--after taxes:

    Wellpoint:  $2.49 Billion

    Humana:    $647.15 Million

    Aetna:        $1.38 Billion

    And that is just the profit reported for three of the bigger insurance companies.  These profits are also what's left after the excessive compensation doled out to their executives and all the other overhead it takes to keep denying claims efficiently.  That these numbers represent only a small fraction of total dollars taken in by the insurance parasites doesn't change the magnitude of the actual amount of money we're talking about one whit!  These profits are indeed obscene given that we have millions who go without healthcare in this country and millions more that pay outrageous sums in premiums that don't adequately cover their medical expenses.  Think how much money would be saved if we simply eliminated these parasites and their companies altogether!  We would have huge amounts of money to put toward actual healthcare.  What a novel idea huh?  A healthcare system that eliminated profit in order to provide more and better care to everyone.  But, God forbid we should discuss that eh?

    That Whore Woodward's piece was an excercise in pure pro-insurance industry propaganda being falsey peddled as an objective analysis is not something that informed people will fall for.  However, the group most likely to fall for this transparent bullshit are... other corporate journalists who slavishly reprint what the AP provides them as though it were, in fact, objective when it clearly is not.  This is a blatant and disgusting example of how the AP has whored it's entire operation to the corporate masters of our economy and how it has destroyed it's once vaunted status as a neutral reporter of facts.  There are many, many other examples of the AP shilling for power and wealth in the past year or two and they should no longer be allowed to get away with doing that without being called on the carpet for it.

     

     

     

    Comments

    There are many faults to be found with the health insurance industry, but excessive profits is not one of them, as Woodward accurately points out. Consistently over the years, profit margins have averaged about 4 percent. It varies somewhat, which is why we occasionally hear misleading claims about percent increases in profits based on a starting era when they were making hardly any profit at all. Insurer profits account for less than 2 percent of overall health care spending, and so if industry profits were eliminated entirely, the savings would be small. It is also true that industry CEOs are overpaid, but again, the consequence to the public is minor. The total of profits plus overhead (including salaries, advertising, marketing, etc.) has tended to run about 15 percent or a bit more (probably 6-7 percent of overall healthcare spending), and so if this overhead were reduced to levels in single payer nations, the savings would again be small. Looked at another way, medical loss ratios (the fraction of premium dollars spent on actual medical servies rather than profits and overhead) had generally tended to be above 90 percent for group markets and 60 percent for individual markets (much more costly to administer), with the average between 80 and 85 percent.

    Is it "obscene" for insurers to make any profits at all? That's a philosophical issue, but the empirical evidence demonstrates that profit-making private insurance is compatible with excellent, affordable, universal healthcare, as practiced in the Netherlands as one example. The Netherlands have achieved this not by eliminating profits, but by tight regulation of insurance practices that eliminates many of the abuses and inequities American insurers continue to perpetrate.

    If one wants to condemn the insurance industry, it makes sense to get the fact right, because making false accusations is likely to backfire sooner or later.


    Fred, with all due respect: hooey!

    They profit off the illness of other human beings and the more they deny service to people on their premium roles the more money they make! That is, on it's face: immoral. Capitalist values have no place whatsoever in healthcare Fred. The insurance companies don't add one penny of value to healthcare in this country. That they make profits in the billions annually only adds insult to injury. No amount of wonkish analysis and rationalization can change the fact that the health insurance industries profits are as obscene as the day is long (not to mention thoroughly undeserved).


    These days, when things are going well you take the 'profit' number for the corp and multiply it by two to find the true profit for the corp since management takes the top half before the shareholders see a dime.


    If payment to management were to be redefined as profit, DD, then Medicare, Social Security, and the EPA would be profit-making institutions. Top management salaries are exorbitant, but contribute minimally to excess costs within the healhtcare system. By all standard criteria, health insurer profit margins are low. More important, the total percent of premium dollars outside of what is spent on health services is not extremely high, and so the combination of return to investors, payments to management, taxes, marketing, etc. does not leave a huge amount of room for squeezing. Given some of the abuses insurers have inflicted on the public, it's unfortunate to see attention diverted away from reforms that correct them in order to falsely scapegoat insurer profits.

    For more on some of the details, see

    http://www.healthbeatblog.com/2009/08/who-is-making-the-biggest-profits-from-us-healthcare-you-might-be-surprised-.html


    We don't need insurance companies at all. That we do is testimony to big money corporate corruption, who buy the whores in our governing bodies. It is time for a revolution, to bury the corporatist whoremasters and their whores, and put the people back in charge. And if you think this is all bullshit, just look around. Take ten minutes and read and try to understand what our situation is. This country is done if we the people put up with this crap.


    The Insurance Industry takes between 25-35% of all premiums to cover overhead and profit. They are currently trying to get upwards of 45%.

    Anyone who believes otherwise - add up the cost spent on Lobbyists, Campaign Contributions, Multi-million dollar Salaries, Public Relations Firms, Attorneys to fight patient coverage and subsequent malpractice suits, normal Advertising, and Advertising Campaigns to stop legislation + the 3-5% profit paid to stockholders.

    WAKE UP!


    That's not correct, Cindy. Current medical loss ratios are above 80 percent, and some estimates place them at about 85 percent. In addition, many states already mandate floors on medical loss ratios, and the currently proposed bills also includes a floor (I believe it's 85 percent) in the House bill and possibly the Senate HELP bill. Health insurers are guilty of many unfair practices, but excessive insurer profits are not the main problem. See the link in my comment above for additional details.


    Here's more from Think Progress demonstrating the dishonesty and misinformation of the health insurance industry and their obscene profits:

    This brief but enlightening piece is titlted: "Health Insurance Industry Fudges Data To Downplay Its Astronomical Profits"

    http://wonkroom.thinkprogress.org/2009/08/05/are-health-insurers-making-too-much-money/


    Great response. I have no patience for this diddling over how poor the health insurers are compared to how poor the other billion dollar profiteers are. The bottom line is that the people in the industry making the decisions that essentially murder their own policy holders for obscene profit are the ones who also happen to be raking in said obscene profits.

    But Fred will continue to beat a dead horse with the dead horse he beat the day before, though you have to hand it to him for putting his horsecrap out there so eloquently. Infuriating, yet admirable.


    Profit margins ought be very low when industry revenues are in the hundreds of billions and growing. It's not the margin that counts, it's the number of dollars and those numbers are gigantic, particularly for an industry that adds no value to a product and is strictly a broker or middle man.


    It's always fun to take an agumentative position and follow it through to its conclusion.

    Those poor, miserable health insurance people are making pathetic profits. This is a sign of a failed industry. Clearly the health insurance industry is dead and just doesn't know it yet. How CAN it survive with all those expenses? Why are these people spending billions in lobbying to save a withering institution. Let's just put insurance out of its misery. It's the merciful thing to do, afterall, because their profits are so meager and they work so hard for next to nothing. A Fair Trade Organization has determined that those people in the health insurance industry are oppressed and their work/compensation is so meager as to be criminal. It must be stoppped. It's just plain wrong.

    There, now wasn't that fun?!?


    Hi kfreed -

    It's not my intention to infuriate you, but to introduce some reality into the discussion.

    Insurance industry profit margins are low (about 4 percent), but the more important figure is that they constitute less than 2 percent of total healthcare costs. If profits were completely eliminated with no other changes in healthcare, the cost savings would be minimal. Reduction in overhead would help a bit more, but the impact would still be slight unless healthcare itself, outside of insurance, is restructured.

    Please see the link I provided above for more details.

    Finally, I don't mind if people choose to aim criticisms at me personally, but it won't do anything to solve healthcare problems. There are many reforms needed, both within insurance and within healthcare itself. To divert attention away from these to the much less significant issue of insurer profits is to forfeit the opportunity to make a difference.


    Oleeb - Thanks for posting that link. It makes the same points I've made above about the level of insurer profits and overhead, and in fact, the numbers it gives for insurer profits per se and as a percent of total healthcare spending are very similar to mine (insurer profits are a very low percent of total healthcare costs). It also makes the same point I made earlier when I stated that medical loss ratios are between 80 and 85 percent. In other words, insurer profits are low enough to leave little room to squeeze for much in the way of healthcare savings.

    It's important not to conflate anger against insurers for inequitable practices and false claims with the invalid assumption that their profits are high. They're not.


    It actually was fun.


    Fred, I admire your doggedness on trying to correct the constant misinformation on this point. But I wonder about your vision, in that you can't see that you can try to point it out until you are blue in the face, but so many are not going to change their mind on this until they get the sticker shock at the premiums required for a public option that is revenue neutral.

    I have come to the conclusion that this is what was intended all along by planners of the Obama and Clinton campaign incremental reform proposals, that you have to let people learn at their own pace that the profits of insurance companies is not the main problem we face, that getting rid of those profits would just be a tiny drop in the bucket of the profit drive in our system, and that managed care is actually what they both need and want despite the bad name insurance companies gave it some time ago.

    You know, I've been thinking on the seniors saying "hands off my Medicare!" What too many under 65 don't realize that when they are saying it, many are saying it partly because as they see it, they paid for that insurance in advance for 40+ years, and want exactly what they were promised for all those payments that could have gone elsewhere.

    Sticker shock when you remove insurance co. profits is coming next, I think that's actually the next step in the reform plan. Those in the administration who thought loss of a public plan wasn't that big of a deal at this point in time were probably not relishing that poltically, preferred slower going for that reason more than any other.


    Artappraiser - Thanks for your insightful comment about "sticker shock". I think you're right.

    On another point, all I can say is that over the course of hundreds of arguments on the Internet on TPM and elsewhere, I strongly doubt that I have ever changed anyone's mind, or at the least the minds of those I was arguing with. My assumption is that these discussions are sometimes read by open-minded bystanders trying to gain an accurate understanding of an issue. In that sense, I try to provide a factual basis, as I see it, that would let them judge the disagreements in ways that lead to reasonable conclusions. When it comes to individuals with set opinions, changing minds is "above my pay grade".


    It's really amazing how an otherwise smart guy simply refuses to get it. Fred, the profits these guys make are gigantic. There's just no two ways around it. To view it from the myopic lense of profit as a percentage of revenue vs looking honestly at the hoard of money they make for themselves is just absurd. They make billions Fred, billions in profits and that is by defnition obscene no matter what their friggin percentage of profit is. How you take justification for your argument out of an article that demonstrates the industry is lying about it's obscene profits is incredible.


    Yeah, it was. Thanks for putting it in perspective for us Gregor.


    Their after tax profit is nothing compared to the amount of money they just flat throw away on bullshit stuff that is written off as business expenses. I don't remember the numbers off the top of my head, I've seen them published in articles, but the money they spend on marketing alone is obscene. Not to mention the huge sums the industry spends on lobbying efforts. Then there is all the money they spend for boondoggle conferences all over the place doing who knows what. They blow more money on useless stuff than most people can even imagine. Having people or departments whose sole purpose is to figure ways to screw customers is a bit of a waste too.


    In fact we'd save money by having the federal treasury buy all the outstanding stock of for-profit insurers. We'd make the money back in a few years, just from paying them to go away and stop killing people by denying care.


    See my comments above on medical loss ratios. Most of the premium dollar is spent to pay for medical services, with the remaining 15-20 percent used for profits and overhead, including all the items you mention. It's more than necessary, but not nearly as much as you may have been led to believe.

    You are right that insurers employ staff to identify cost cutting measures that often deprive subscribers of needed care. Proposed reforms are designed to rectify this abuse, but this is mainly a fairness issue rather than an issue of high insurer profits. Eliminating these staff practices will be emotionally gratifying, but it won't save too many dollars out of the healthcare budget.


    The bullshit expennditures are 30 cents on a dollar as I recall.


    That's incorrect. Overhead is typically less than 15 cents, and the total of overhead plus profits (i.e. everything that doesn't go to pay for medical services) is 15-20 cents.


    That isn't the numbers I have read.


    It's in links provided above by Oleeb. You are welcome to cite your own data sources, but I think you'll find that the numbers I gave are correct.


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