Are Insurance Company Profits Excessive?
Posted by: admin // Category: Blog Entries, Guest Contributors, Kevin PriceWe are told, daily, about the “exploitative” profits being made by the large health insurance companies in the form of premiums. The “huge” amount of dollars collected should be grounds for the massive take over of health care by the government, we are often told by the media. Politicians discuss these companies like preachers from the pulpit, using terms such as “immoral” and “disgusting” as measures of the amounts they make. According to the Associated Press, the real numbers show a different story.
Health insurance profit margins run around 6 percent, give or take a point or two. That is very small compared to other forms of insurance and below the standard 7 percent most of us learned in economic classes as the corporate average for profits.
Here are some of the points from the AP article:
I personally do not care how much a business makes as long as its profits are legal and they face competition. The Obama Administration likes to complain about the health insurance industry “monopoly” on health care, as if we were all dealing with a single company. In light of the fact health insurance companies are making considerably less than other industries, it is clear that these companies do not enjoy anything like a monopoly. We will not, however, be able to say the same about Obama’s public option.
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