http://finance.yahoo.com/news/obamacare-windfall-insurers-ex-obama-151518014.html
Don't believe the hype that insurance companies are getting squeezed on Obamacare. That's the message from one of the architects of the president's health-care law.
"All of these companies are expanding greatly in the exchanges," Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, former special advisor on health policy, told CNBC's "Squawk Box" on Friday. "Their revenues are up. Their profits are up. Their stocks are up. They're not suffering because of" Obamacare. Last week, Aetna (AET) Chairman and CEO Mark Bertolini appeared on the program, saying the insurer priced its 600,000 Obamacare customers who tend to be older and sicker at lower margins.
Emanuel, vice provost at the University of Pennsylvania, countered Friday that insurance and hospital companies anticipate more Americans will sign up for Obamacare. But he did acknowledge some hurdles ahead. "There is a big challenge going forward renewing, keeping people in. It's a challenge. It's not a mountain." Since leaving the government, Emanuel said he's been trying to change the way hospitals and doctors get paid. "We don't incentivize the health-care system to keep people healthy." "We got to get them off the pay-for-service fee system," he said. "We have to move to a situation where doctors and hospitals get money for keeping people healthy and out of the hospital."
Emanuel-who's no stranger to politics as the brother of former White House chief of staff and now Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel-said there's support for his payment-reform idea on Capitol Hill.
"If you talk to congressmen and senators ... away from the media, they're 70 percent or 80 percent in agreement that this payment reform is the most important thing and we need to get it done," he said. "We have to start it in the next five years." Emanuel said he thinks there's a shot at an agreement to overhaul health-care financial incentives after the midterm election in November. -By CNBC's Matthew J. Belvedere Eightplex 21 minutes ago1
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I have always wanted the big insurance companies to have more money. I think that big insurance executives should have access to billions instead of just hundred of millions. Since insurance companies can't have a profit and don't pay taxes but instead have "reserves" it warms my heart to know that Obama is looking out for them. I don't mind sacrificing and not having enough money to pay for health insurance because it is more important to support our leaders than it is for me to have money!
smitty 15 minutes ago0
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Who would have thought that obama's legacy was going to be that he is the greatest insurance salesman to ever live. THAT is the legacy that will be his and his alone. I thought Carter was a disaster but obama is far worse.
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