woodchip wrote:TC, the problem with what slick is telling you is he's trying to justify the ACA. The real question, TC, is what were you paying and getting on your old insurance policy. In my case I was paying 230.00 a month 50 a 20/80 plan with a max 5000.00 deductible (before it got eliminated). I suspect that would be heaven if it was offered now.
I had something similar, a $247 monthly premium and a $7500 deductible and I was quite happy with it,
until it was dropped because it didn't meet the ACA's minimum requirements and
for the real reason, the insurance company wasn't making enough money off of me to make it worth their bottom line. Plus, it was legal for insurers to
leave a state market if they weren't being profitable. It was perfectly adequate for me however and I never even used that much health care while I had it, so they made money off of me anyway.
callmeslick wrote:obviously, rates vary with region, but at my age, here in Delaware, I could buy a 20% copay plan for myself with a $7500 out of pocket max for no more than $350 per month right now. The plan my wife have is $15 copay, $2500 deductable and $5000 out of pocket max for two people over 55 years old, and that one is $1325 per month. Is Michigan in the exchanges for policies? To the topic of rises in costs, when I worked for one, I was insured via my corporate plan, generally there were choices. The total premium costs between the company share and mine went up FAR faster than the average rate since the ACA came into being, at least during the period of 2000-2010. The fact that my wife and I could get insurance without severe limits and waivers under the ACA made retirement an easy call.......there might have been a chance that neither of us could get insurance until we hit Medicare, at any price, before then.
Some more information on that state by state slick. But unfortunately, all those low sounding rates aren't
age adjusted for anyone above age 60, which is that magic age to start seeing much higher premium rates, nor are they for individuals who
aren't working, so they look downright cheap to me, even with the rising premium trends. The problem that I and a lot of other non-working older middle class individuals who were thrown onto the mercy of the individual Obamacare market is that we DO NOT have any bargaining power. We are the few and the forgotten by Obamacare. We have no way to pool ourselves together like employers can to help with rate negotiations and we aren't poor enough for subsidies thanks to the ACA. That means a large percentage of our income will go towards health insurance and not towards anything else in the economy. Besides, most people who are employed are typically in a low risk pool anyway. If they're working, they're most likely younger and not sick, so of course they'll see lower premiums.
http://www.ncsl.org/research/health/hea ... miums.aspx
Good lord, that puts my crappy and dirty local hospital to shame. When my husband had the misfortune to stay there for just one night, it was so gross that he checked out post haste the next day. That setup looks cleaner and more luxurious than even my own house. Plus, there's no way in hell I could EVER afford that!
I'll have to say one thing about Trump, at least he knows that repealing Obamacare without something to replace it with would be a catastrophic mess, all on his watch, especially for those 22 million currently on Medicaid subsidies, courtesy of the ACA. The Republicans however, are still champing at the bit to get rid of it no matter what. Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead! And woody, they had YEARS to come up with some sort of replacement in a few backroom deals, but as usual, it was all bluster. They never even
tried to come up with an alternate plan. If they had, we'd have see something ready to go on the books in the first session of Congress.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/trump-wa ... 11784.html
Let's see if the Republicans have the balls to pull this maneuver. We'll get see how much disunity actually exists between the Republicans and how much they're willing to risk going against Trump, which will make HIM look bad, and you know, he doesn't like to look bad at all.
http://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/ ... yptr=yahoo