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by toast0
1133 days ago
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If the employer doesn't self insure, then their insurer will raise their rates because their employees have a history of expensive health problems. Which still leads to pressure to get rid of those employees. (Unless the employer based coverage is priced like marketplace plans, where only age, sex, and smoking are available to set prices; but I don't think that's the case for most?) |
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This is illegal since 2011 due to the Affordable Care Act.
The only factors allowed to price insurance is age, location, and tobacco use.
https://www.healthcare.gov/how-plans-set-your-premiums
Even the age factor is bounded by the highest risk age having to be only 3x the lowest risk age (i.e. a subsidy from young to old). The lack of ability to price based on pre existing health conditions is a subsidy from healthy to sick.
And for political reasons, we can afford to discriminate against tobacco use, but not sugar or alcohol or sat fats or lack of exercise.