Whining? :squint: Barbarian already beat me to the punch here, but seriously...ah, well. In point of fact I don't have to worry about health care any more than I have to fret over retirement. So I'm in a different position from most of the people talking about the issue. I don't have a real axe to grind. The system as is wouldn't stop me from getting whatever I needed.
As to the misleading bit about profit (excluding the more obvious difference between 2 and 6 percent) most consumers with means obtain insurance. Despite the fact that millions are without it, the vast majority of us have it and pay for it. If you have an essentially captive audience then a margin per customer can be lower and percentages won't give you the dollar picture. You make your money on volume. That other corporations make even more money is no real counter.
I could say this:
Amgen (biotechnology): Profit margin, 30.6 percent
Gilead Sciences (biotechnology): 37.6 percent
Johnson & Johnson (drug manufacturer): 20.8 percent
Insurance companies need to cover this plus medical costs on that claim.
Insurance company industries 3% profit is also after they pay executive compensation; this is a cost (liability) on the balance sheet
True, they do make little on claims, but there real money is the healthy ones with no claims. yes, large pooled cost/benefit profit on sample claims, but they do not use full population revenue to show profits, just claims, then adjusted for that year, across the board. Keep in mind they are very smart.
Ok now the big one, Medicare, how game they manage it when they usually take assignment and Medicare pays far less than private insurance companies?
Reason? This has nothing at all to do with Medicaid going broke, that is paid from taxes. The issue here is the physicians and hospitals take a much lower payment.
But I will say that I have been in hospital, and services are about seven grand and so, far, I own about 200 bucks.
2014:dead: