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Re: That is a difference, true. Sareitha Sedai Send a noteboard - 13/08/2011 01:01:14 AM
It's true that you can "opt out" by choosing not to own or drive a car.  Another difference is that the point of requiring car insurance has nothing to do with protecting yourself or your car.  It's to ensure you can meet any financial obligations you incur when you harm somebody else's person or vehicle.  


If your health gets ruined, you are the only one who suffers, wheras if your car gets ruined it sometimes harms others in the process. And at least in Canada, you don't have to carry the replacement insurance for your own vehicle; that part is optional. That is a good point.


Yes, here too, it's only the liability (to others) part that's required as well.

I know that it's being made out as a matter of choice in the US, that people shouldn't be forced to buy health insurance, and I can see where that point of view comes from a little better now. It seems though that there are probably a lot of people who only don't have health insurance because they can't afford it. In such a case, forcing them to buy it definitely seems like the wrong approach. But what I would consider the right approach (giving them a more affordable option) would seem to be strongly opposed by the insurance companies.


It is a lot to think about.  There are a lot of people who choose not to afford it, too ;). And insurance really only works when you have healthy people subsidizing sick people...but I think you are correct about where the insurance companies' incentives lie.

I don't even know if it would be possible to link health insurance costs to income levels so that people making less money could get cheaper insurance if they choose to buy it (nothing mandatory), without giving higher income people a cheaper  option that would harm the profits of insurance companies. I don't know all the ins and outs. That's just the option that my mind is going to first. I suppose it would require mandating price levels to some extent for the insurance companies, which I'm sure would run into problems too. Because the option of having the government provide alternate, cheap insurance that only lower income people could choose to buy would lead to high monetary losses for said government. Would it lead to high losses for a private insurer as well? More losses certainly, but could their current profit margins absorb those losses without turning black ink into red?


Well, I think the public option that disappeared from the legislation was meant to serve that purpose, and without it, the mandate really isn't viable. 

I'm just talking out loud, I don't actually expect answers to any of that. It's obviously a complicated problem. I'm actually enjoying thinking about it without all the partisan, political nonsense that usually gets in the way.

If you are from Betelgeuse, please have one of your Earth friends read what I've written before you respond. Or try concentrating harder.

"The trophy problem has become extreme."
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Does America have mandatory car insurance? - 12/08/2011 09:42:17 PM 581 Views
Not as such. - 12/08/2011 10:04:26 PM 457 Views
It's determined by the state, but in most states, yes. - 12/08/2011 10:05:39 PM 483 Views
That is a difference, true. - 12/08/2011 10:19:26 PM 477 Views
Re: That is a difference, true. - 13/08/2011 01:01:14 AM 419 Views
Also - 12/08/2011 10:11:34 PM 347 Views
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I'm sure that's at least part of it. - 13/08/2011 01:09:04 AM 340 Views
No, and in fact it isn't mandatory in all states - 12/08/2011 10:20:38 PM 363 Views
Huh. - 12/08/2011 10:22:57 PM 444 Views
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WI - 12/08/2011 11:05:42 PM 349 Views
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Re: WI - 13/08/2011 12:42:31 AM 450 Views

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