Insurance Companies Dancing Without Touching

Paul Levy

First published 3/21/11 on [Not] Running A Hospital

A story in the Washington Post talks about health insurance companies seeking new lines of unregulated business as the profitability of health insurance falls and as more and more requirements are placed on that line of business as a result of the federal health reform law. Here’s an excerpt: “Insurers have moved into technology, health-care delivery, physician management, workplace wellness, financial services and overseas ventures in wide-ranging efforts to mitigate the new rules imposed by the law.”

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Reminders of Art Buchwald

PAUL LEVY

Originally published on [Not] Running A Hospital

I cannot locate the article, but I think it was Art Buchwald who once wrote a humorous piece about competition between the two airlines who ran shuttle services between New York and Washington, DC. It went something like this:

The piece opens with a phone call to the US Airways agent. “I see you just raised your fares to New York.”

“Yes, we did that to compete against Pan Am. They just raised their fares.”

“Wait, I thought the idea of competition was to lower prices.”

“Why would we do that? If we lowered our fares, and they followed suit, it would be a race to the bottom. We would both lose money.”

Recently, Tufts Health Plan (730,000 members) and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care (1 million members) announced a plan to merge here in Massachusetts. This would leave two major insurers in the state, along with Blue Cross Blue Shield (3 million members).

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