Author Archives: SEH

Individual Health Insurance Premiums

The AHIP Center for Policy Research (a division of the health plan trade group, America’s Health Insurance Plans) has released a summary report of its annual survey on Individual Health Insurance 2009.  Among other findings, the survey shows that the average premium for family coverage purchased in the individual health insurance market is much less than the $13,000 plus figure for employer-sponsored family coverage reported by the Kaiser Family Foundation, even for people in their late 50s and early 60s.  A major reason for the lower average premiums in the individual market is that it offers more choice and the policies purchased often include significantly higher deductibles than employer-sponsored coverage.

Pelosi and friends’ public plan rhetoric

Speaker Nancy Pelosi and a number of other Democrat leaders continue to press for a public insurance plan (i.e., a government-run insurer) in health care reform.  They argue that a public plan is necessary to provide consumers with “choice” and to “keep insurance companies honest.” It’s hard to imagine that Ms. Pelosi and colleagues believe their own rhetoric.

For decades Federal employees and members of Congress have purchased their health insurance through the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP). Under this program, numerous private insurers compete for employees’ business subject to oversight by the federal Office of Personnel Management. The FEHBP is generally acknowledged to work very well, with high levels of employee satisfaction.

While a public plan would be useful if the the objective is to crowd out private health insurance and move towards a single-payer system, the FEHBP proves that a public plan is not needed to provide choice or keep insurance companies honest.

(A new book by Walton Francis, Putting Medicare Consumers in Charge: Lessons from the FEHBP (AEI Press, 2009), provides a user friendly description and history of the FEHBP and compares the program to Medicare.)