Monkey Head, private Health Insurance is kind of like a community bank. Everyone who wants to participate is charged according to their insurance plan, any health issues that come up are deducted from the pool, and anything more than that goes to the company as profit. If too much is being removed by insurance claims, then the company raises its prices on everyone or lowers the percentage that it pays for claims. So if you participate in this, you get to help pay for everything from runny noses to heart transplants (Depending on the company's policies). Keep in mind that companies don't typically cover every health issue, and rarely foot the entire bill for anything (Again, subject to the company's policies).
The big reason this is such a big issue is the community/individual debate, which is kind of what we're having right now. The driving force behind health care is that it would, in theory, benefit everyone. However, this comes at the cost of individual freedom to choose. Whether or not I'm healthy and know to earn and use money wisely to pay for unexpected hospital visits, I still have to give money to benefit the rest of my community.
And that's the stick of the situation. Lots of people don't like being forced to pay directly for products they may or may not want or need. The need part is debatable in this case, of course, but there's also lots of people that need to quit smoking and drinking excessively. They're not only hurting themselves, they're putting other people in danger. There are bigger issues at hand than making sure everyone's paying for each other's hospital visits.
I don't disagree with what the health insurance law is trying to accomplish, here. I'm glad companies can't suddenly drop people when they get sick, now, and I like that companies actually have to spend their money on claims rather than more sexy secretaries. Other parts have just been done with a ham fisted approach that I find not cool.
Just a nitpik, Knight, but Health Care prices can only go down if more, not less, people are in the system. The rates that are charged to all customers go into the insurance company's coffers, which then distribute the service to insurance claimaints. The more people that you have paying into an insurance companies coffers, the easier it is to reduce rates, because less money overall is required to cover the minor increase in claimants.
More people in the system means more insurance claims, too, and it could mean larger ones pop up more often. Prices would probably stay about the same. I think the spending requirements Aqizzar mentioned, which are part of the law I agree with, are far more effective in lowering prices.
FAKEEDIT: GRRR, Stop posting before me.
I'd say the same thing, but I spend so much time thinking*, typing, and editing that I really don't have an excuse. Dang college classes are making me excessively verbose and opinionated.
*Okay, not really.
Well actually knight the way a insurance company pays for anything is they take your money, and then invest it in other things to earn a profit, part of which goes to making the amount of capital they have on hand larger and part of which goes to their profit as a company. So the company takes your 100 bucks, adds it to everyone else's money, buys stocks or bonds or other investment vehicles, and then they use that to accumulate capital in the form of stocks and bonds and other things, which they will sell when you get sick and need care.
There are many horror stories of people who couldn't afford to pay sudden healthcare bills because they didn't have insurance, but as you mentioned you are healthy. The reason this goes beyond your individual freedom is that when you go to the hospital and are unable to pay it gets passed on to everyone else. Sure you could pay, but many poor people go to the emergency room for basic care, because they have to help you due to laws passed by the government and the Hippocratic Oath, both of which say a doctor must treat patients who can not pay, so the doctors charge other people more.
Now if your healthy self was to join the insurance market, you would have to pay into the collective pool of capital that is used to finance other people's health care expenditures. Under ObamaCare the poor and unhealthy uninsured will also be included in the market, with the poor receiving subsidies, this will absorb a substantial proportion of the increased profits from the increased pool of capital now available to insurance companies, along with things like covering pre-existing conditions. Ultimately the increased profits will exceed the increased costs from new insurance claimants, because most uninsured people are young healthy people like you and me who think they will never need it, (although I am still young enough to be covered under my parent's plan), so they will be able to decrease the price of insurance.
ObamaCare also includes things like cost controls for Medicaid, estimated to save 10% in ten years, and costs controls for healthcare in general in order to reduce what has been on average a 8% inflation rate in the healthcare market. It also ensures that the increased savings from the bill will go to customers by limiting the amount of profits insurance companies can earn, as Aquizzar mentioned.
Also, as Aquizzar mentioned, the individual mandate is what pays for many of the increased insurance coverage of the bill because if healthy people don't pay up then the company only covers sickly people, increasing the risk to the company and hence the cost to the customers, assuming profits are static. Without the mandate the companies just couldn't afford to lower their prices without being lynched by their shareholders.
I'm actually not in favor of a health insurance market, I believe in health savings accounts like what Singapore has, but if you have to have a private health insurance market than this is one of the best options. Of course you can questions whether there should be a public or private market but that's another question.