Via Joan McCarter, we learn that Wellpoint, which runs a number of for-profit Blue Cross/Blue Shield insurance plans, reported on an investor’s conference call that it expects to add over one million new policyholders this year and that its enrollments are much better than expectations. Of 500,000 enrolled so far, fully 80% of them came to the company via the exchanges. Of that amount, 2/3 were eligible to receive subsidies for their insurance premiums.
Of course, for those of us who support single payer, giving money to private insurers is a mixed blessing. We’d be better off without them, but under our current political situation, this is the best we will be able to do for the uninsured for a while. As McCarter points out, stories like this mean that Obamacare is going to be unrepealable soon, if it isn’t already.
Meanwhile, if you could stomach listening to the first Republican response to President Obama’s State of the Union address Tuesday, you heard Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodger (R-WA) tell the plight of a woman she called “Bette in Spokane,” who supposedly had to pay “nearly $700 per month” more for her health insurance, after her insurance company canceled her old plan.
As with many other such stories, this one has collapsed under scrutiny. As the linked article shows, Bette Grenier had had a catastrophic plan canceled, and she only compared it to the price of a Gold-level policy her insurer suggested as a replacement. Not only were cheaper policies available, she told the paper she would not go on the state exchange to look for a policy, even though this would likely have saved her even more money compared to the one her insurance company offered. She told the paper she and her husband planned to go without insurance.
As Paul Krugman (who pointed me to the Spokane link) notes, there is a reason why catastrophic plans aren’t allowed: “If you’re allowed to have insurance that barely covers anything, that’s almost the same as not participating at all.” Which appears to be exactly what’s happening in this case.
Cross-posted from Middle Class Political Economist.