Menu
The Goodman Institute Health Blog
  • Home
  • Authors
    • Devon Herrick, Ph.D.
    • John C. Goodman
  • Popular Topics
    • Artificial Intelligence and Healthcare
    • Consumer-Driven Health Care
      • Affordable Care Act
      • Cost of Healthcare
      • COVID-19 and Public Health
      • Doctors & Hospitals
      • Public Insurance
      • Policy & Legislation
    • Direct Primary Care
    • Health Economics & Costs
      • Drug Prices & Regulations
      • Health Insurance
      • Health Reform
    • Medical Tourism
    • Telemedicine
    • Medicare
      • Single-Payer/Medicare-for-All
  • Goodman Institute
  • Contact
The Goodman Institute Health Blog

Category: Health Insurance

How the IRA Bill Subsidizes the Rich

Posted on March 23, 2023March 23, 2023 by John C. Goodman

The benchmark premium for an exchange plan in Prescott, Arizona, for a family of five with a 60-year-old household head is $50,923 in 2023.

  • If that family made $150,000, they would qualify for a subsidy of $38,173.
  • If that family made $350,000, they would qualify for a subsidy of $21,173.
  • If that family made $500,000, they would qualify for a subsidy of $8,423.
  • This family does not lose subsidy eligibility until they make more than $ 599,000.

The projected cost per newly insured is nearly $14,000 a year over the next decade—a high amount that shows that most of the new spending is simply replacing private spending with government spending.

Brian Blase testimony

+

Saturday Links

Posted on March 11, 2023March 11, 2023 by John C. Goodman
  • Health officials and governors in more than half the country are now restricted from issuing mask mandates and school closures.
  • The 42% of adults who are obese costs the US health system 173 billion dollars a year, including cardiovascular disease, cancers, depression, breathing issues, and skeletal issues. Despite this, 98 percent of Americans do not receive treatment for their obesity.
  • Greg Mankiw: “The Biden administration faces a trilemma: They would like to (1) increase spending on programs they consider important, (2) not raise taxes on those making less than $400,000 a year, and (3) put fiscal policy on a sustainable path. But the stark reality is that they can have only 2 out of the 3.”
  • A defense of Vinyl chloride. (despite the dead fish)
  • IRS: 42K federal workers are cheating on their taxes.
+

Hospitals Ignoring Price Transparency Rule; CMS Ignoring Hospitals’ Noncompliance

Posted on March 3, 2023 by Devon Herrick

Prices in health care are often difficult to obtain and meaningless when you obtain them. There is not one price but dozens of prices depending on who the payer is. There are different prices for Blue Cross, Aetna, Cigna and UnitedHealth. There is the pricemaster (list) price that almost nobody pays. The chargemaster price is often the official cash price if you lack insurance coverage and don’t inquire prior to care. Then there is the cash price if you negotiate in advance of care, which is often lower than the list price. If you were to inquire about the price, assuming you were told a price at all, you would likely be given the pricemaster charge for a specific billing code without information about which billing codes belong together. You see, a knee surgery isn’t one code, it’s numerous codes so hospitals can bill for numerous services.

+

How Much Do Health Insurers Make?

Posted on March 2, 2023 by John C. Goodman

Kaiser: Health insurers’ margins were more than double in Medicare Advantage than in other markets in 2021. Gross margins in the Medicare Advantage market averaged $1,730 per enrollee in 2021, compared with $768 in the Medicaid managed care market, $745 in the individual market and $689 in the fully insured group market.

+
  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 171
  • 172
  • 173
  • 174
  • 175
  • 176
  • 177
  • …
  • 195
  • Next

For many years, our health care blog was the only free enterprise health policy blog on the internet. Then, when the NCPA closed its doors, the health blog stopped as well.

During this five-year hiatus no one else has come forward to claim the space. So, my colleagues and I have decided to restart the blog in connection with the Goodman Institute. We invite you and others to use this forum to share your views.

John C. Goodman,

Visit www.goodmaninstitute.org

Subscribe via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 40 other subscribers

Popular Topics

©2025 The Goodman Institute Health Blog | Website by Lexicom