Wall Street Weekly | 08/21/2009 9:30 am
Bullies Threaten Insurers; Is Profitability a Crime? by Liz Peek

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Bears, Bulls, Chickens and Pigs: wOw’s Wall Street Weekly with Liz Peek (Week of 8/17)
Editor’s Note: Liz Peek is a financial columnist and the author of wOw’s SHEconomics.
In Washington’s sandboxes, the bullies are gaining the upper hand. This week’s news that Henry Waxman and Bart Stupak of the House Energy and Commerce Committee had written letters to 52 insurance companies demanding reams of information about compensation, client entertainment, executive retreats and other data was so dismaying. Unable to advance health-care legislation or tame an increasingly hostile electorate, Congress has decided to beat up on health insurers – Nancy Pelosi’s favorite "villains."The letters are, of course, showboating – much of the data sought, such as the compensation for the CEOs of the largest companies, is already in the hands of the SEC. No, Waxman and Stupak aren’t after information. The real play here is to threaten the industry with embarrassing exposure, so as to prevent them from resisting President Obama’s No. 1 agenda item. It’s disturbingly Orwellian. House Democrats have seen how effective it is to loose populist anger against an adversary; who will ever forget the mortifying Congressional assault on poor Ed Liddy, the fellow that stepped in to help sort out AIG and was absolutely excoriated for his troubles.
Ironically, as The New York Times and others have reported, the insurers, led by lobbyist Karen Ignagni, have been on board with reform from day one. Ms. Ignagni, CEO of America’s Health Insurance Plans, must have been pretty darned surprised to have her industry come under attack. She had already guaranteed the president that the companies would agree to not deny coverage to clients with pre-existing conditions and to discontinue basing premiums on a person’s health status or gender – the two most important concessions that Obama has requested. Presumably the insurers do not welcome a government-run competitor, and will argue against that part of the proposal. Since many of these firms are publicly owned, management could be sued for not attempting to block legislation that would be harmful.
The attack on the insurance industry is worrisome mainly because it is yet another in a series of anti-business outbursts from the Obama camp and its Congressional allies. What is the industry’s crime? The president accuses the industry of being profitable, and indeed "making record profits" – as he stated at a recent press conference. (Actually, profits for the industry are down from the 2006-2007 levels.) What kind of charge is that?
The president and his reform teammates have implied that insurers are earning unconscionable profits on the backs of unfairly treated policyholders. Otherwise, the reasoning goes, how could an industry be so successful? That conclusion mandates the question – just how profitable are insurers? According to Fortune magazine, not as profitable as Internet sales companies, or pharmaceuticals, or railroads or telecommunications companies. In fact, in Fortune’s listing of industry by profitability, health-care insurers and managed-care companies came in 35th with a profit margin of 2.2%. Yes, the top ten companies last year earned $13 billion; it is a huge industry – the aggregate number, often quoted by reformers, doesn’t mean a thing.
For sure, we all have issues with our insurance companies. They are an easy target. But trying to develop important and complex legislation by demonizing companies that employ Americans, pay taxes and provide an important service does not reflect well on either the president or on Congress.
The Obama administration’s desperation to drive through health-care reform may reflect their anxiety about the economy. After all, coming up to the midterm elections, they have to have something to show for their control over all three branches of government. It must be driving them crazy that for every data point showing that a bottom has been reached in housing or manufacturing, there is a little hiccup showing that the consumer remains in lock-down.
Read more about: Barack Obama, Bart Stupak, Business, Ed Liddy, Government, health care, Henry Waxman, Karen Ignagni, Liz Peek, Nancy Pelosi, News, Politics, U.S., Wall Street Weekly























591 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
If you take a look at the people Obama hung around with and what his political beliefs actual are he is not hard to figure out …. He is as far left as you can get in beliefs as are Pelosi, Frank etc. - and that is all right if the whole country is ready and willing to accept the kind of change that will make our Republic redundant ….
http://www.freerepublic.com/~papabear3625/
Bella Mia, Your views are warped. Working middle class people need help. Government is not distorting our relationship with insurers.. People have first hand experience with denied care or have policies cancelled due to pre-existing conditions. I don’t read your posts most of the time because I receive a daily dose from other right wingers. You all say the same thing. Nothing new here. You live in another world.
excerpt: "Without health care reform, health insurance premiums could almost double by 2020, according to a report by the Commonwealth Fund, a 90-year-old non-profit health care charity.
According to "Paying the Price: How Health Insurance Premiums Are Eating Up Middle-Class Incomes," employer-sponsored family plans will rise from an average cost of $12,298 in 2008 to $23,842 in 2020 (the same coverage would have cost close to $9,200 in 2003) if health-care costs continue to rise at the current rate.
"With health spending projected to double if we stay on our current path, middle- and lower-income families are at high risk of losing their coverage or facing long-term stagnant incomes. Employers and employees share premium costs, but we know that take-home pay and retirement savings are being sacrificed to maintain health benefits. Reforms that slow the growth of health-care costs could go a long way toward health and financial stability for working families." "
Here’s my issue with all of this, the government bureaucracy has screwed up enough. They have their hands in education (I’m referring to the No Child Left Behind bill), our school system (I can’t vouch for anyone else’s) ours has gone in the toilet so far that the only way to hope my kid/s get an education is to send them to private school where the meddling is limited, not non existant at least it’s limited. We can then move on to social security and how badly that is all messed up. There is talk that there will be no cost of living increase for at least 2 years. For those who are in their 90’s as my grandmother is, she lives on a fixed income of 600$ a month and that is it! Ok, maybe it’s 625$, my point is that those increases are not a lot and seniors on a fixed income depend on every little thing they get.
While health insurance is messed up and there is no question about that, for me to insure my family at work not on cobra is $600 a month, no I’m not happy about that, however there has to be a better answer than having the government get involved as they have already screwed everything else up I’d like to at least keep what I have without then being told this is bankrupt as well. There is way to much room for abuse of power, absolute power corrupts absolutely. I don’t want my children growing up in the USA with the government constantly screwing things and refusing to accept any kind of responsibility for it.
I agree, again I would rather they have limitations on the healthcare industry than allow the government to run it. They can’t govern what they already have, how are they going to do healthcare as well? In many of the posts MANY people from other countries come here for service because it IS better than the socialized systems in place. Especially if you are dealing with something like cancer. I mean imagine your child has cancer, and it’s treatable however you have to wait for 7months if not longer for your child to get care and tell me that is something that is ok. I couldn’t stand the idea of not being able to do something for my family and being told I have to wait.
If the bigwigs of our government want to give up their pensions, their private insurance, take a paycut then I’ll have something to listen to from then until that time. It’s their own agenda that they are pushing not for the greater good of we, the people.
It is insurance just like for your home or car! Even Canada’s plan does not break even and is in debt.
SASKATOON — The incoming president of the Canadian Medical Association says this country’s health-care system is sick and doctors need to develop a plan to cure it.
Dr. Anne Doig says patients are getting less than optimal care and she adds that physicians from across the country - who will gather in Saskatoon on Sunday for their annual meeting - recognize that changes must be made.
"We all agree that the system is imploding, we all agree that things are more precarious than perhaps Canadians realize," Doing said in an interview with The Canadian Press.
http://www.google.com/hostednews/canadianpress/article/ALeqM5jbjzPEY0Y3bvRD335rGu_Z3KXoQw
Amelie,
Is it also unconscionable to profit from the misfortune of another’s hunger or thirst? Or any other misfortune for that matter? What about the misfortune of your car breaking down? Or the misfortune of you getting into an accident? Or the misfortune of your house burning down? Or the misfortune of a loved one dying? Why aren’t funerals free? They are a basic human necessity, you know.
You want to talk about basic needs, why don’t we "fix" them all in one fell swoop? Since cars, jobs, and houses are all necessary, and part of FDR’s "new bill of rights" we should provide one for each individual. Since food, water, clothing, and life/AD&D/health/car insurance are all necessary as well, let’s go ahead and give that to everyone, too. Hell, we all need credit cards, too, so let the State run that as well! We can’t let The Man keep us down by making a profit off this stuff! We have rights too, you know!
Then in very short order we can be just like Karl Marx always wanted, instead of taking our sweet time.
*sigh*
All of our rights are founded in natural law and endowed us by our Creator, not our government. Therefore our government can neither provide nor deny our rights. The right to live; the right to exercise free will by making our own decisions; the right to keep what we earn and do with it as we see fit; the right to defend ourselves and our stuff from the ill intentions of others;the right to say, listen to, and print what we wish; the right to be judged by the content of our character; the list goes on. And, naturally, we only retain these rights to the extent that they do not violate another’s rights. We don’t have a right to any more health care than we can provide for ourselves or secure with our own resources, because any such "right" would be a de facto violation of another individual’s natural, God-given rights.
I may even print that and put it up on my wall, Bill. Well said. All good points. Sarah Palin might even be successful if she happens by this page, reads your "kampf" and adopts the basic principles. I almost got a tear in my eye, and could hear Pomp and Circumstance playing faintly in the back of my head.
Allow me to speak in plain ol’ American…Mr. Bill, while you just lean on your big gun and listen. Don’t forget to put the safety on. But when some asshole in a cheap suit thinks he deserves a pat on the back for saving the insurance company money, and Wall Street cowboys celebrate a blockbuster year of earnings, because "cheap suit" found a way to deny benefits to some unlucky sod who was just diagnosed with cancer, and by one big swipe of a red stamp issues indirectly his death warrant, this indicates to me that the world you’d like to live in is WRONG, just plain WRONG about this one point. THAT IMHO is unconscionable. If your God gave us the right to life, sometimes it takes a little oversight from your big brother to protect it. Does that at least make sense to you? Typical hysteria to reference Karl Marx BTW, nice touch.
Amelie,
Thanks for the roast, I always appreciate a little snark.
It sounds like you and I disagree on a much more fundamental level than I originally thought. What part(s), specifically, do you disagree with? God-given rights instead of government-given rights? Rights founded in natural law? The rights, enumerated and implied, that I referenced? That your rights end where mine begin? That the abolition of private property and government takeover of industry and credit is a Marxist philosophy? That FDR’s "new bill of rights" is so much bologna?
Please enumerate so that we can continue with intellectual debate, instead of ignoring the important details and setting up a straw man that you can make out to be villainous and then tear him down.
Here’s a quick rundown of how business operates. "Cheap suit" has a responsibility to the shareowners, customers, and the rest of the employees at that company to ensure that the company stays afloat. Someone at the top, who gets paid a lot of money to make important decisions and chart the company’s course, much like a ship’s captain, tells the people under him how to act in order to maintain the company’s viability. That travels down the line to "cheap suit" and his coworkers, who make decisions based upon a given set of criteria in order to make a profit and keep the company around. Anyone in that chain who doesn’t act in the company’s best interests, will soon be looking elsewhere for employment. Because no profit means no company, and no company means a) no customers get the insurance they need, b) none of the employees get the wages or benefits that they got the job for in the first place, and c) the shareowners lose the money that they invested in the company. Nobody wins when a company fails. That’s why "cheap suit" does his part to keep the company afloat. He didn’t afflict the individual with the disease/bad luck/grievous injury/old age in question, and all he can do is uphold the contract between the company and the individual. Then everyone wins, to an extent, even the individual that dies because of it, because if the company hadn’t been around in the first place, it couldn’t have helped him at all prior to that point. If you don’t like the contract, and think that they charge too much for it, take your business elsewhere.