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by grecy
4746 days ago
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The parent comment we're replying to, and the highest rated comment in this thread starts with: > Linking basic health care to employment as a default is ridiculously stupid. People are agreeing with that, and I'm saying it also applies to extended healthcare. My argument: health and employment should be divorced. Your argument: you get a better deal when they are connected. I think you're being naive because you're being tricked by marketing and the current system and rules. If they entire system were overhauled to divorce them, there is no reason it needs to cost more to buy as an individual. I ask you - how much profit are health care providers making in Canada under the current system? With those billions in profit, surely there is room to change the pricing scheme so it doesn't cost more for individuals. |
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There is no viable reason why employers should be banned outright from offering extended benefits as a condition of employment to compete for talent.
If they entire system were overhauled to divorce them, there is no reason it needs to cost more to buy as an individual.
This statement shows a complete lack of understanding of actuarial science, which is the basis of all insurance. See Here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Actuarial_science
A simplistic example: Employer A, hiring white collar office workers will get better rates when they say that they won't hire someone that is a (for example) a pilot, so the insurance company excludes all pilots from the base tables they use to rate the group. You as an individual don't get this luxury. You use a larger pool of people, but they aren't predefined as much into your own lifestyle subset, ergo, you don't get the benefit of lower rates. Even better, your employer's annual renewal actually takes into account the actual experience of your company directly. So, if everyone in your office sees the doctor one less time this year over last, your rates go down. You don't get this benefit in individual insurance - the pool is just too big to make a meaningful difference to a single data point.
At any rate, HN comments is not the right environment to teach someone actuarial math. Read the link for more details.
how much profit are health care providers making in Canada under the current system?
The nice thing about using math is that everything is out in the open. Profit on insurance premium is actually pretty low - in the 5-10% range. It's strength though is that it is entirely predictable, so it is rare that the profit is suddenly a loss. Insurance companies make most of their money through selling services and via investments.
My conclusion here is that although well intentioned, I think you are entirely ignorant of the topic at hand.