On All Things Considered.
Very brief. Her major point was that insurance company don't set costs, they just pass through costs. (I would of course counter that they contribute to raising costs since they add no value,make MORE money if they deny what they are supposed to provide, and have bloated admin and excessive excutive compensation, but that is neither here nor there.)
but one set of points she made stood out.
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=121834368Insurance Executive: Overhaul May Bring Disruptions
Karen Ignagni, president and CEO of American's Health Insurance Plans, talks with Robert Siegel about her industry's concerns regarding the Senate health care bill. She says without cost controls, health care will be less affordable for millions of Americans and small businesses. She also says new regulations may cause disruptions for current policyholders.
SIEGEL: But will they pay more for that piece of mind?
Ms. IGNAGNI: Well, the answer to that question depends on whether the mandate works. Will we have everybody covered? Will the younger and healthier people decide not to participate? Second, the so-called rating rules: In 85 percent of the country, they don't have the kinds of - anything near the kinds of restrictions that will be imposed in this bill which means that we will have to significantly - to meet these requirements, significantly increase the cost of services for people under 35.
SIEGEL: Just to give our listeners an idea here, I want you to give us a couple of - just name a couple of states where because of what state insurance regulations already exists where premiums are likely to go down and a couple of states where, given what regulations do or don't exist, premiums are much more likely to go up.
Ms. IGNAGNI: Massachusets is a very good example of premiums in the individual market going down. In New York, we will see premiums go down. California, Texas, Florida, Ohio a range of states around the country who are not in the category of guarantee-issue states or having rating bands will see costs go up. Just so people can understand, our rating band is a ratio between what you can charge the person who has the lowest cost, relative to the person who has the highest cost. The whole objective is to assure people that all of these changes will work and that the cost will be as they expect, which is affordable.
This of course goes back to the point that Obama and the Democrats have created a political time bomb for themselves when millions of people discover that "reform" did not make insurance more "affordable", that it made it more expensive.