If there is a health care reform bill, it will most likely further entrench the health care monopolies,especially the Blue Cross system and the Big Pharma patent controls. This from Dylan Ratigan at Huffington Post makes that point clear:
Why is health insurance the only business that has an exemption from the Sherman Anti-Trust Act other than Major League Baseball? . . .
Through the governmental negligence that we as voters allowed, a health care system was created in which a single health care company controls at least 30 percent of the insurance market in 95% of the country, including states like the following:
Maine, where Wellpoint controls 71% of the market.
North Dakota, where Blue Cross controls 90% of the market.
Arkansas, where Blue Cross Blue Shield controls 75% of the market.
Alabama, where Blue Cross Blue Shield controls 83% of the market.This monopoly, combined with the misaligned incentives that trap people in employer-based health care, is causing the skyrocketing health care costs that are hurtling our nation towards bankruptcy.
I don’t know what’s worse: that most Republicans seem to be against ending this unfair legal protection for an entrenched industry that is ruining our country with their non-competitive practices, or that most Democrats seem to be threatening this arrangement only as a bargaining chip to push for a meaningless public option that wouldn’t be accessible to almost 85% of the population?
Instead of improving our country, through creating and enforcing free and fair markets, our politicians are currently engaging in backroom deals, most of which protect the very companies who profit the most from these disastrous outdated systems — industries like health insurance and big Pharma.






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Empty Threats to the Health Insurance Industry « Unsilent Generation // November 9, 2009 at 6:53 pm
[...] there is little change in the offing. So there won’t likely be any threat to the incredible monopolies the insurance companies hold in many [...]