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Old 04-03-2012, 03:07 PM
MysticCat MysticCat is offline
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Join Date: May 2002
Location: A dark and very expensive forest
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AlphaFrog View Post
I never understood why health insurance should have anything to do with your employment. Why health insurance?
Back in 2009, this American Life did a good little summary on how our employer-based health insurance system developed. You can hear the segment on that here.

The short answer is that the granddaddy of health insurance companies -- Blue Cross -- got started marketing itself to employers/employee groups to build pools of premium payers, most of whom wouldn't need to use the insurance much. (Though I don't think they mention it, Blue Shield had a similar start. Blue Cross was for hospital care and Blue Shield for physician care.)

Then, starting with WWII and its tighter labor pool and limited wages, employers began to offer health insurance more widely (along with other fringe benefits) to lure workers. Then, the government said that employers didn't have to pay taxes on health insurance premiums, giving employers a major incentive to offer health insurance as an employee benefit. And there we were.


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Originally Posted by Tulip86 View Post
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Originally Posted by Ghostwriter View Post
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Originally Posted by DeltaBetaBaby View Post
Yes, this is the problem with a sorta half-way system. We should really just go to single-payer and be done with it.
Yes but this would then lead us down the same path that the U.K., Europe and Canada has already gone down with poor service and increased costs. . . .
Can you clarify what you mean by "Europe"? You know that that ranges from Iceland to Turkey right? Quality of healthcare varies greatly in Europe. Scandinavian and Benelux countries have possibly the best healthcare in the world, while other European countries have abysmal heathcare and a hospital visit is both costly and downright scary there.
Not to mention that single-payer and universal health care are not the same thing. While most of Europe has universal health care, not all European countries achieve universal health care through a single-payer system. Germany comes to mind as one country that has universal health care with a multi-payer system.
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