MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
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MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
The insurance industry is shedding a lot of customers/policies that aren't quite profitable enough .Not hopeless "dogs"or they would have shed them long ago.
I ask myself "what could make all those policies profitable." And the answer is.......... 'put them in one pile'. We know that the way insurance works is that insuring against just one risk is....... risky even tho insuring against 5 thousand of such risks would make sense.
That's called taking advantage of the "law of averages". Or better "being an underwriter"
Which causes me to wonder: if any one underwriter owned all of these policies would it make economic sense.?Which I answer by saying "No because it would be too much of a risk for any one underwriter to take." ( To keep it simple I'm not bringing in "Reinsurance)
Unless it was the Government itself.Unlike any other single underwriter it could take the risk.
So this is not a fundamentally unsolvable problem.And if something can be solved there's a pretty good chance it will be.
Comments
It would have been interesting to give this set of facts to Larry Summers.
by Flavius on Fri, 11/15/2013 - 5:45am
You made me curious enough to search the news. And what I found is someone basically saying "look at the really big numbers"
He's painting a picture where adjustments of billions of government dollars here and there along the way are petty things that wouldn't mean much in the scheme of things. I could certainly see him saying to Obama: "just run with whatever you feel you have to, why the heck are you worrying about it?"
by artappraiser on Fri, 11/15/2013 - 10:18am
It should be pointed out, though, that Summers and Zeke Emmanuel were the main ones who were concerned that there wasn't a health care czar to handle the rollout and Emmanuel has been out there this week reiterating that point.
by artappraiser on Fri, 11/15/2013 - 10:33am
There's a confab going on today:
by artappraiser on Fri, 11/15/2013 - 10:39am
So, are you saying that if it was the government that took on fully insuring all the high risk people, than insurance companies wouldn't have to worry about getting a lot of healthy young people to sign up to offset the older, more ill people, thereby eliminating one of the big worries about what needs to happen if ObamaCare is going to "succeed" in the long run?
Sounds good to me.
by MrSmith1 on Fri, 11/15/2013 - 4:23pm
I haven't gotten far enough in m thinking to express an opinion on that
by Flavius on Sat, 11/16/2013 - 11:20am
Some state insurance commissioners sound really pissed, so far it seems they only see a passing of the buck. From After Obama Meeting, Insurers Question Plan’s Workability
by Reed Abelson and Susanne Craig, New York Times, Nov. 15, 2013:
While the insurers quoted in the first part of that article don't seem nearly as freaked out, not as the headline suggests.
This piece at Talking Points Memo explains a complex situation in Calilfornia:
Why California Is The Key To The Obamacare 'Fix'
by Dylan Scott, Nov. 14, 2013
where the state required the insurers to terminate the old policies if they wanted to be in the exchange and that the insurers had wanted and fought for that rule, even though they were first turned down and there was strong opposition to it. So now this would be re-fighting that battle.
by artappraiser on Sat, 11/16/2013 - 2:01pm
Suggestion that the Obama admin. is thinking about more government support of risk corridors:
by artappraiser on Sat, 11/16/2013 - 3:06pm
Follow the link in Dr. Gawande's re-Tweet to a post on topic at "The Incidental Economist":
by artappraiser on Sat, 11/16/2013 - 5:09pm
Risk corridor: It is like the movie Death Race 2000, but with actuary accountants.
The O'Brien article is alive with the kind of self assured snark that reminds me I am getting old.
But it does get to a kind of point; either some people's loss gets addressed or not. The rest is arguing about the cut off point.
I don't know if the single payer route would have made a better mess but it would have at least made the cost issue more honest in terms of "us" being an inclusive democracy. The wanting to have a social instrument to moderate these things but rejecting the idea because it means we are quantifiable forgets we already did the second thing. Years ago.
by moat on Sat, 11/16/2013 - 7:21pm