Feedback Form


Young Adults Will Soon Face Health Insurance Mandate

alg_young_adultsYoung adults will soon have to deal with the cost of government mandated health insurance.

Currently, a large percentage of young adults are uninsured. According to the CDC:

  • Young adults between the ages of 20 and 24 are the most likely to be uninsured
  • 30% of those between 18 and 29 are uninsured

In an attempt to curb this trend, Wisconsin has passed a law allowing people up to age 27 to remain on their parents’ health insurance plans unless they have access to cheaper plans through their employers.

Read more here…

Constitutionality of mandates

U.S. Capitol BuildingAn interesting question on health insurance mandates – Does the U.S. Constitution allow the government to require uninsured Americans to buy medical insurance or impose a tax penalty if they refuse?

Both the House and Senate health bills would mandate the purchase of health insurance to help subsidize the program and offset the cost of adverse selection.

Does Congress have the authority?

Read more here…

Individual mandates and adverse selection

(May 11, 2009 - Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images Europe)

(May 11, 2009 - Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images Europe)

Individual mandates would help offset the costs associated with adverse selection.

In health insurance, adverse selection is the tendency of poorer risks to want insurance more often that standard risks (i.e. sick individuals are more likely than healthy to seek out insurance coverage.)

Under a purely voluntary system, most healthy individuals would likely not choose to obtain coverage.  The individuals most likely to enroll (subsidized insurance or otherwise) would be those who are older and/or who are less healthy than average.  People value insurance more if they plan or expect to use it, and are more likely to participate.

Without mandates, adverse selection would most certainly drive up costs for insurers and as a result, premiums would rise sharply.

Individual mandates are an attempt to offset some of the costs associated with adverse selection.

Read more here:

Do Individual Mandates Matter?

Side-by-Side Comparison of Major Health Care Reform Proposals

kff-logoThe Kaiser Family Foundation has a website that allows an interactive, side-by-side comparison of the major health care reform proposals currently under consideration. The comparison includes a breakdown of all the key characteristics and plan components including, but not limited to the following.

  • Employer and Individual Mandates
  • Benefit design
  • Financing

Visit the site to run your own comparison.

The new House bill is no friend to small business

social-media-peopleThe biggest loser of the House Healthcare Reform Bill is Small Business.

  • Provide government-specified health insurance or pay a penalty of up to 8 percent of payroll
  • 30 percent of firms with fewer than 200 employees that now offer insurance would fail the test for family coverage, and about 20 percent would fail for individual coverage

Read the New York Post article here