Insurance Tug-Of-War
Posted by editor on Sep 30, 2008
The upcoming elections will define the state of life of the Average Joe in the future. In the field of health insurance, the winning candidate’s proposal will be implemented. Let’s examine the two differing plans, as scrutinized by NEWSWEEK’s Mary Carmichael in her discussion with Katherine Swartz, a professor of health policy and economics at Harvard.
Obama’s plan: An insurance exchange that looks like the Health Connector used in Massachussets. Every plan would have a minimum set of benefits, and you would get a subsidy if your income is below the threshold.
Their prediction: The total cost will be more than the estimate. His requiring insurers to cover pre-existing conditions would probably raise premiums. Although children and more people would be covered than there is now, some adults will continue to be uninsured.
McCain’s plan: to take away the tax break workers get on health insurance at their jobs, and give people who buy their own insurance $2,500 ($5,000 for families) in tax credits.
Their prediction: Low-income people would have a hard time getting affordable insurance on their own. In the long run, employers would probably stop offering health insurance, and more people would end up uninsured than there are now.
