The opposition to Obamacare is not based on insurer profit, it is based on consumer choice. In the short term, Obamacare may be beneficial to insurers, but it will almost certainly destroy them in the slightly longer term.
I would agree, but there should also be concerns about the statute's impact on consumer choices outside of health care spending.
Since it's an important household expenditure that's crowding out more productive forms of spending and investment, a convincing case can be made to sustain and supplement programs that deflate this sector's burden on households. However, I remain unconvinced that in a context of acute political discord, and a fragile economic recovery that remains vulnerable to the animal spirits, that it was wise to expend scarce capital---in all its forms---on an initiative that had a scope that was certain to elicit a strong response from the opposition. Indeed, I think investments in reducing labor costs, a more conditional unemployment insurance---and assistance, and the stabilization of strained asset prices would have been more sound targets. But unfortunately, the dual effects of the 2008 election and the last recession led to irrationally exuberant---or intransigent---behavior that greatly distorted the calculations that political actors would've made in normal conditions, leading to a needlessly messy political battle that has destroyed the prospect of pursuing targets that were deserving of greater precedence. Returning to my original point, though, and leaving the opportunity costs aside, I think households should be given sovereignty over their use of federal funds. To be sure, the extent of household debt suggests that their consumption choices may have dubious or detrimental values, but the unchangeable reality is that they still possess a greater knowledge of how to more efficiently spend public money that they're entitled to receive. As this applies to the individual mandate, I believe we're making the mistake of mandating the spending of scarce funds on health care, which demonstrates a clear disregard of the variable conditions in each household---whom are more inclined to be worried about stagnating wages, commodity price behavior, and other living costs. So if it's not already clear, the point is that since health care is not a concern that sits at the top of the preferences of all households, and because of this attitude, a better outcome should be achieved if households were to be given greater freedom of choice through a cash transfer. Of course, dispensing with the individual mandate will most assuredly reverse the positive fiscal impact of PPACA, but such an argument looks very narrowly on the broader costs that will come in the form of inflation, and the precipitous drop in the existing number of employer provided health insurance.
Anyway, it should be clear that my post is not targeting the views of rwac, which are in greater harmony with my own views.
Edited by Rational Madman, 08 January 2012 - 03:52 AM.