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Five Reasons Health Insurance Companies Should Roll Back Rates Now

Posted: 06/23/11 08:47 AM ET

Insurers, awash in billions of dollars in record profits and excess capital, should give consumers their money back

The health insurance industry continues reporting record-setting profits while socking consumers with unjustified and excessive rate hikes. Today, Health Care for America Now (HCAN) called on the Wall Street-run health care profit machines to accelerate the consumer rebates required by the Affordable Care Act and immediately give back billions in premium overcharges to families and businesses.

Year after year insurance companies have imposed double-digit premium hikes on America's families and businesses to pay for their excessive profits and financial shell games.
The insurance companies say that their premiums reflect costs, but that's simply not true. Rates have gone up by an astounding 131% since 1999. That's twice the rate of medical inflation. It's also three times greater than wage growth, and it's busting family budgets and employer balance sheets.

Fortunately the Affordable Care Act is changing things. Under a consumer protection provision in the new law, the Health and Human Services Department estimates that insurers will owe up to 9 million customers as much as $1.4 billion in 2011 rebates payable next year. The new rule - called the medical-loss ratio - sets a minimum percentage of premiums (80% for individual and small group plans and 85% for large group plans) that insurers spend on actual medical care instead of wasteful overhead, excessive profits and bloated CEO salaries. Companies that fall short of the minimums must rebate the money to consumers.

Some insurers in California, Connecticut and North Carolina have already rolled backed rates, declared premium holidays or issued direct refunds. The rest of the industry should do the same nationwide.

Here are five reasons why insurance companies can and should roll back rates now:

1. Insurance company profits have gone too far.

Through the economic recession and its aftermath from 2008 to 2010, the combined profits for UnitedHealth Group Inc., WellPoint Inc., Aetna Inc., Cigna Corp. and Humana Inc. increased 51 percent.

In the first quarter of 2011, the combined profits of the five companies, which cover one-third of the U.S. population, surged 14% to $3.6 billion. If the trend holds, they'll rake in a record $14.4 billion in profits in 2011.

2. Premiums are going up while medical spending is going down.

Premiums have risen 131% since 1999 for families with employment-based insurance. America's Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), the insurance industry's mouthpiece, likes to blame customers for rising premiums. People who buy health insurance have the annoying habit of using it when they get sick. But premiums have increased at twice the rate of medical inflation.

And, as a percentage, insurers are spending less of our premium dollars on actual medical care, and more on administrative costs like lavish CEO pay, marketing, lobbying, and the care-denial bureaucracy. The ratio of medical to administrative costs is known as the medical-loss ratio. In the first quarter of 2011, Cigna led the industry in finding ways to avoid covering actual health care - the share of premiums Cigna spent in the first quarter on medical care dropped to 77.3%, an extraordinary 5.6 percentage-point decline from 82.9% a year earlier. Aetna trimmed its health care costs from 81.1% of premium revenue to 77%. And Humana reduced its patient-care spending rate by 3.5 percentage points.

3. CEOs Spend Billions on Dividends and Stock Buybacks to Boost Share Prices and Enrich Themselves.

Record profits and reduced health care spending don't tell the whole story. Insurance companies use other Wall Street tools to quietly direct customer cash into their own pockets. For instance, insurers bought back $1.8 billion in their own stock in the first quarter - a practice that reduces the number of shares available in the market and boosts stock prices.

Since 2003, the five largest for-profit companies have allocated $66.9 billion in customer cash to buying back their own stock to reward insiders and Wall Street investors. So far this year, share prices for the five health insurers have risen 38% to 52%, compared to less than 3% for the broad market index. This benefits CEOs who hold large stakes in their own companies and who get bonuses, stock awards and stock options for guiding share prices upward. Buybacks do nothing to improve public health, make insurers more efficient or reduce premiums.

The five big for-profit health insurers have been so profitable that they're shoveling it back to investors. WellPoint announced that it plans to pay $400 million in dividends this year, while UnitedHealth plans a dividend of $449 million and Aetna expects to pay $230 million.

4. Insurance companies hoard cash in the name of "solvency."

In addition to excessive profits and stock buybacks, insurers have also been building massive capital reserves. On December 31, the nation's for-profit and nonprofit health insurance companies were holding $97.3 billion in risk-based capital to cover unexpected medical claims - six times more than state regulators require, according to Citigroup Global Markets.

5. While insurance companies are awash in cash, families and businesses are barely getting by.

It's unconscionable that insurance companies continue to impose double-digit premium hikes on America's families and businesses to pay for their excess profits and financial shell games at a time when consumers and employers are struggling in this tough economy.

At the end of this year, the new health law requires insurers to square up and pay us back for their excesses. But insurers shouldn't wait to give back our money. They should start paying consumers their rebates right now.

 

Follow Ethan Rome on Twitter: www.twitter.com/@HCAN

 
 
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legge001
Healthcare Policy Guy
09:57 PM on 07/26/2011
One thing you might have mentioned is the shortfall on payments from Medicare and Medicaid and their upward pressure on rates which are, in part, a product of cost shifting by hospitals and other providers who charge more for commercially insured patients to cover the underpayment from Medicare and Medicaid. I would be the last to praise the insurers rates and profits but until the gov pays the fair share for their enrolees (which will be never) expect more of the same especially with any plan that cuts entitlements. While you are taking credit for The Affordable Care Act passage, you might mention that paying for volume of services is still in place continuing in large part to pay hospitals and physicians on the basis of how much work the can churn out not on the quality of what the patient outcomes are. As wrong headed is penalizing providers for doing more with less. The system is still broken. It remains too expensive, will still not include everyone and the quality is still an issue killing many thousands of patients every year. I am not defending anyone but there is plenty of bull to go around and few heroes.
04:11 PM on 06/27/2011
It always amazes me that insurance companies do not charge rates based on usage or at least give discounts for a healthy life style/

Why should a family with one child pay the same as a family with 6 children? Additional children require additional trips to the doctor.

Why should a smoker pay the same as a non smoker?

Why should a drinker pay the same as a non drinker?

Why should someone that is obese and a high risk for heart disease, stroke and cancer pay the same as someone with a healthy BMI?

Why should someone that exercises regularly pay the same as someone that does not?

Where are the incentives to lead a healthy life and have reduced medical costs?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
capitaldysfunction
White male never voted Republican
03:37 PM on 06/23/2011
The American people get what they deserve, and they don't deserve much cause they don't think much. Even allowing private insurance to exist is a sociopathic societal rip off.
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JohnnyWalkerBlueLabel
527HP, 12.4@112mph 1/4 mile
03:26 PM on 06/23/2011
Premiums go up because people demand the best health care that someone else's money can buy.
03:06 PM on 06/23/2011
It's called free enterprise not socialism companies are in business to make money....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nomccain
02:38 PM on 06/23/2011
Who's gonna make them?????? Just saying.
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Dibbles
Et cum spiri tu tuo
01:45 PM on 06/23/2011
Ethan:

You assume that health insurance corporations have a conscience. They don't! The evidence is overwhelming, but the media is propped up today by health insurance advertising dollars. If the media weren't so corporate profit focused themselves, they'd expose the health insurance industry's "Cause Celebre" for the last 30 years of wage stagnation among the majority of Americans. But we know that the media no longer investigates injustices done to Americans on a national scale.

Insurers also offloaded employer's costs by creating higher employee premium expenses where the cost of the medical visits through higher deductibles keep increasing. In our recession environment, those same workers delay care and treatment as they don't have the money to pay the high portions of the costs. At the same time, the insurance companies receive all the premiums with far fewer expenses for that coverage.

Other than the mortgage security meltdown that cost most Americans their largest portion of savings by losing home equity, the health insurance industry has received the deserved mantle as the major reason America has lost its ability to grow economically. We can't get out of this mess unless we have a national health care system. This health cartel will fight that through every means possible. We know that the largest GDP countries in the world have seen increases in profits, wages, and employment more consistently now than we have for 30 years. They all have national health care.

Signed: Canary in the Coal Mine
01:34 PM on 06/23/2011
Insurance companies are high volume money changers who bring NO value to the system other than to have a few actuaries that predict spend and thus the minimum premiums (which are ignored by the rest of the rate setters.) Given their high volume and no-value added work, their profit margin should be less than the grociery stores - less than 1%. Yes they need to make money but to pay them like they are a highly technical manufacturing organization, is crazy. The levels for the minimum spend on health care are still too low.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frank day
Republican = FAIL
02:14 PM on 06/23/2011
great post

fanned
12:35 PM on 06/23/2011
Should I go wait by my mailbox for a check?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frank day
Republican = FAIL
02:15 PM on 06/23/2011
No, just enjoy keeping more of what you earned.
12:30 PM on 06/23/2011
I'm on Medicare and supplemental and my supplemental insurance premiums have gone up ever since Obama care has been on the table. Of course the insurance companies are hoarding capital. They are mandated by this law to insure every person regardless of their previous condition as well as having to take people who don't pay any premiums for health coverage until they get really sick. Supposedly 30% of the country doesn't have insurance. When that part of the law goes into effect the industry has to cover these people. They have to insulate themselves from the effects of that draconian requirement. Without increasing capital now they would have to require huge premium increases when they have to pick up these uninsured and that would be politically impossible. As hard as it is for the big business haters to believe this, this mandated requirement could bankrupt some of them. What they are doing makes good business sense and allows them to continue serving the public.
09:47 AM on 06/24/2011
Since "Obamacare" doesn't go into effect until 2014 any large increases you have gotten have nothing to do with it. if your insurer told you that they are lying to pad their bottomline and deflect your attention away from their games.
12:13 PM on 06/23/2011
Articles like this are misleading, absurd and dangerous. Health insurance aren't going to roll back rates because they "should"--they are going to charge as much as they can possibly get away with. They are REQUIRED BY LAW to charge as much as they can possibly get away with--they are for-profit companies. They are NOT LEGALLY ALLOWED to take into consideration things such as "public good" or "conscience." They are LEGALLY REQUIRED as their PRINCIPAL PURPOSE to do EVERYTHING THEY CAN to MAXIMIZE PROFIT. They have NO OTHER LEGAL PURPOSE.

This is why for-profit health insurance CANNOT and WILL NEVER work. It is an antiquated dinosaur of a health care delivery system, and it's persistence in the American economy guarantees our economic stagnation.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:10 PM on 06/23/2011
They won't roll back their rates. Health insurance execs get their jollies when they see American sgetting poorer and poorer and sicker and sicker. The only answer is to immediately arrest every single health insurance company's CEO for attempted murder. Their policies of insurance denial and rate increases INTENTIONALLY cause thousands and thoiusands of Americans to die every single year.

Health Insurance companies ( by order of their CEO's) practice atempted pre-meditated murder every signle day.
03:07 PM on 06/23/2011
maybe a little dramatic
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WaveRhydr
DIEBOLD-WE VOTE SO YOU DONT HAVE TO
11:53 AM on 06/23/2011
I think the author should have included a 6th reason...namely that if they dont cut their rates, they will go extinct. That our nation will send them to the dust bin of history, and go with single payer health care...LIKE THE REST OF THE WORLD HAS NOW.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jimmy B
Atheism is a non-prophet organization
02:11 PM on 06/23/2011
Vermont's starting it, the rest of the dominos will fall soon after. Can't wait.
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Greyfox01
My shoe knows more than they do.
11:52 AM on 06/23/2011
Another reason; if the economy continues it's slide into hell ....... many of the insured will start dropping healthcare coverage altogether. At that point the insurance companies like many others for profit businesses will have to start offering gift coupons, or offering one week paid vacation to Mexico with each signup.
12:14 PM on 06/23/2011
That might sort of be funny is this wasn't health care, and if people weren't dying all over the place on account of our ridiculous system.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frank day
Republican = FAIL
01:08 PM on 06/23/2011
It is funny. It is also true.

Many people are having to drop insurance in order to pay the rent and buy food.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DMDAY44
01:33 PM on 06/23/2011
People dying all over the place? Please back that up with something besides rhetoric.
11:43 AM on 06/23/2011
Few health care providers and insurance companies are reassured by the latest round of promises from the Obama Administration, which insists that everyone who doesn’t receive a waiver will just love the latest round of brilliant reforms, mandates, and taxes they’re cooking up behind closed doors.
11:49 AM on 06/23/2011
behind closed doors? where were you? me, I saw it and heard it and read it all as it unfolded - only unhappy with the failure to eliminated insurance companies and have a single payer, national system like most evolved nations - not at all interested in reassuring those companies who pay their top layer of execs with our premium dollars - too many multi-millionaires among their ranks, plus brokers who take 30% of our premiums - no wonder there was never enough left for providers -
11:58 AM on 06/23/2011
Right, let the charlie foxtrot government run it..10x the cost..1/10 gets done