Author Topic: What Should Be the Next Step on Repealing ObamaCare? Ted Cruz Has the Answer (Patterico)  (Read 1073 times)

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What Should Be the Next Step on Repealing ObamaCare? Ted Cruz Has the Answer

Patterico // Posted at 4:05 am on March 27, 2017

 
So. What comes next on repealing ObamaCare?

The TrumpCare bill (AHCA) was a disaster. It was not a vote to repeal ObamaCare, but rather a vote to keep it, and tweak it. That’s not what Republicans promised to do, and it’s not good enough. We should not mourn its passing, but celebrate it. The defeat of the bill was glorious, and the members of the Freedom Caucus who opposed it are heroes.

The reason fans of the free market are angry is not because TrumpCare failed — but because of the statements by Paul Ryan and Donald Trump that they are done with trying to repeal ObamaCare. Those statements are wrong and dangerous. As Ted Cruz once said:


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First principle: Honor our promise. When you spend six years promising, “If only we get elected, we’ll repeal Obamacare,” you cannot renege on that promise. Failure is not an option. Breaking our word would be catastrophe. The voters would, quite rightly, never again trust Republicans to deliver on anything.

Amen.

The response to the defeat of TrumpCare is not to pick up the ball and go home. It must be to draft a bill that actually does what Republicans promised, and drives down costs through market-based mechanisms.

What should such a bill look like? As it turns out, Ted Cruz had a proposal that outlined an answer to that question. I blogged that op-ed before, but with the defeat of the AHCA, Cruz’s op-ed has renewed relevance, as a blueprint that could bring Republicans together and actually repeal ObamaCare. I think it’s worth giving his proposal another detailed look.

First, Cruz suggests something I have been pushing throughout this process: starting with the 2015 repeal bill.
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First, begin with the 2015 repeal language. . . . Virtually every Republican in Congress voted for that language, and the parliamentarian has already ruled it as permissible. We should begin with that previously approved repeal language as the baseline.

Bingo. The recent debate over AHCA has shown that the previous votes to repeal ObamaCare may have been fraudulent show votes. But here’s the thing: if you’re a moderate, it’s easier to justify a vote against AHCA than it would be to justify changing your vote on the exact same language you voted for before.

A duplicate of the 2015 bill, we learned yesterday from Andrea Ruth, exists — today, in this Congress. It is languishing in committee. It needs to be pushed to the floor and voted on.

But the 2015 bill is not enough. So Cruz next focuses on areas that should provide broad consensus for Republicans. They include excellent ideas like “allow[ing] consumers to purchase insurance across state lines,” ensuring the ability to buy “low-cost catastrophic insurance on a nationwide market,” and the use of health savings accounts. These would all have the effect of increasing competition and lowering costs. But it’s what Cruz says next that I consider critical:

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Third, we should change the tax laws to make health insurance portable, so that if you lose you[r] job you don’t lose your health insurance. You don’t lose your car insurance or life insurance or house insurance if you lose your job; you shouldn’t lose your health insurance either. And that would go a long way to[wards] addressing the problem of pre-existing conditions, since much of that problem stems from people losing their jobs and then not being able to get new coverage on the individual market.

Fourth, we should protect continuous coverage. If you have coverage, and you get sick or injured, your health insurance company shouldn’t be able to cancel your policy or jack up your premiums. That’s the whole point of health insurance.

These suggestions by Cruz are very important, and I want to discuss them at some length. Here’s where it gets tough, because there’s a bitter pill that, in my view, Americans have to swallow: we have to get rid of the ObamaCare provision that requires companies to insure pre-existing conditions. Now I can already hear a bunch of people yelling: hold up there hoss, that’s never going to work and people don’t want that. Do me a favor: hear me out. There’s a way to address the concerns people have about insurance companies’ refusal to insure against pre-existing conditions without this mandate. The answer lies in Cruz’s suggestions in his op-ed, which contains terms that may seem abstract to some people, such as “guaranteed renewal” and “equal tax treatment for individual plans” and “portability.” But if you stick with me for a moment, I’ll explain the reality behind these abstract terms, and how they can help solve the problem.

First, let me say that I understand why people wanted the provision requiring coverage for pre-existing conditions. Very simply: the situation before ObamaCare was untenable for a lot of people, and the recession made it worse. Here’s the scenario: you’ve been carrying health insurance for years through your job — but then the recession hits and you are laid off. You’ve been responsible all these years, but in the meantime you’ve developed a serious health condition. Because insurance is tied to work, you’re now thrown into the individual market, which is entirely dysfunctional and which may well reject you because of your “pre-existing” condition.

This is an entirely unacceptable state of affairs. It’s unfair, and Americans should not have to stand for it. And it seems to many people as though the easy answer is to tell insurance companies: hey, you have to cover these conditions! But here’s the problem: that leads you inextricably down the ObamaCare path, because if you mandate coverage for pre-existing conditions, most people just won’t buy health insurance until they develop those conditions. That’s clearly an unworkable situation for insurance companies, because they can’t make money by selling only policies that are going to lose them a lot of money. And that’s what led us to this Rube Goldberg contraption of ObamaCare, where the government decided to pad the insurance companies’ bottom line by forcing healthy people to buy insurance, and even forcing them to buy coverage for things they didn’t want and would never want (like maternity care for a single male).

So the pre-existing conditions requirement is not some perk that we can keep while ditching the rest of ObamaCare.

So what else can be done? Well, there’s always single-payer. If you liked socialism and think it worked well for the Soviet Union, North Korea, and Venezuela, you’ll love socialism in health care! The rosy Big Media descriptions of socialized health care in Canada, the UK, and elsewhere often leave out the plight of people who die waiting for their operations, and are simply neglected by a system that has no real incentive to improve their health. There’s also a corrosive effect of nationalized health care on your ability to criticize the government. If you think politicians making decisions about your life is a good thing now, just wait until they have power over whether you live or die. Dissent is going to be a little more difficult then, isn’t it?

Luckily, the free market has another way. It’s called guaranteed renewability — the same concept as the “continuous coverage” described by Cruz in his op-ed. Guaranteed renewability is described in this excellent paper from the Mercatus Center:
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[G]uaranteed-renewable insurance permits consumers to renew their coverage at the same premium, regardless of whether they have developed any new chronic health conditions since obtaining the insurance.
If you really want to go deep into the policy analysis, I recommend reading that paper. But the essence of the idea is that, like term life insurance, annual premiums are lower if you buy in when you’re young and healthy. This way, the money that insurance companies need to cover people who have developed serious health conditions is provided voluntarily by younger people who want to buy into guaranteed renewal coverage early, rather than by a government-ordered mandate enforced by penalties (or if you prefer, Justice Roberts, by “taxes”) imposed on people who don’t comply.

Why didn’t this happen pre-ObamaCare? Actually, it did — but it was unworkable for a lot of people who lost their jobs, because insurance was not truly portable. The Mercatus Center paper says that “most individual market plans were indeed sold with this guaranteed-renewable provision” — but if you lost your job, you’d end up having to convert from a health plan sponsored by the employer to an individual health plan. This would subject you to rejection for a pre-existing condition — the very same unacceptable racket described above. The HIPAA law in 1996 attempted to address the issue of portability, but did not really fix the problem.

A large part of the reason health insurance is not fully portable is the differential tax treatment between employer-sponsored and individual plans. Insurance premiums paid by employers are not taxed, while premiums paid by individuals are.

How could we even out the tax treatment of employer-sponsored and individual plans? We could follow the lead of most economists and rescind the tax exemption for employer-sponsored plans, but that would be very unpopular. The Mercatus Center instead suggests “modification of the tax code to extend the tax break for health insurance beyond the employment-based market into the individual market.” In other words, give the tax exemption to everyone. This would still amount to a subsidy by the federal government — but employees already enjoy this subsidy, and the unequal treatment of individual plans is not equitable and distorts the market. The key is treating both types of plans equally under the tax code.

Of course, we can’t just snap our fingers and achieve all this overnight. As the Mercatus Center paper acknowledges, “a transition to this market-oriented arrangement would likely have to be coupled with high-risk-pool coverage for those who already have pre-existing conditions, but the need for these high-risk pools would decline over time.” You can’t just yank the rug out from people who have no choice but to depend on the ObamaCare system in the near term. But moving towards a market-based system will lower costs and premiums.

We also have to move away from the situation where a third party pays for everyday costs. Basic health care should not be covered by insurance. Your car insurance does not cover oil changes, and health insurance should not be used for basic care like checkups and treatment of everyday illnesses. When people have to make their own choices about how much to spend, prices will fall — and so will insurance premiums.

What about the people who can’t afford insurance (or who are simply irresponsible and do not buy insurance)? Well, first of all, with the above reforms, there would be far fewer people in that situation than there were in 2008, before ObamaCare was passed. But in the end, this is a separate question from the basic policy of how to repeal ObamaCare. There will always be the less fortunate in society who can’t afford some of the basics of life: housing, food, health care, and the like. And there will always be people who are irresponsible and don’t plan for their future, whether it’s in the area of health insurance, life insurance, retirement, their kids’ education . . . the list goes on.

For these groups of people, there will always be a tension between people like me, who recommend that such issues be taken care of by charity and the private sector when the problems to be addressed are serious or life-threatening, and leftists who want the government to take care of everybody. Either way, the reality of the world is that resources are scarce, and not every need can be met. This will always be true under any system. Government cannot simply decree that everyone will receive the best possible care for every illness. Any system, whether public or private, will result in some people not being able to access scarce resources. No government health care system is a panacea, and anyone who keeps their eyes open and watches for stories of people being mistreated under socialized health care will find them. The VA is just the tip of the iceberg.

But the solution is not to give ideal care to people who could have bought insurance but chose not to. Imagine doing that with any other type of insurance: Gallant buys a fire insurance policy and Goofus does not — but Goofus knows that government will buy him a new house if his house burns down. Goofus is not going to buy insurance in that scenario — and Gallant won’t either. The concept of insurance is destroyed by such an arrangement. Some Goofuses are going to suffer in the free market — but again, no resources in this world are unlimited, and Goofus will never have all his needs met without contributing to society.

Finally, let me briefly revisit a topic I covered before — because the reigning assumption appears to be that repealing ObamaCare would leave millions uninsured and worse off. This is completely bogus, and the fallacy of that argument must be central to any discussion of what to do next. For the full argument, I commend to you my post from March 8. Here’s the summary: to the extent that health care coverage has increased, that increase has resulted from two factors: a) gains in employer-sponsored insurance, and b) an expansion of Medicaid.[/i]

<..snip..>

http://www.redstate.com/patterico/2017/03/27/next-step-repealing-obamacare-ted-cruz-answer/?utm_source=thenewamericana.com
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Offline InHeavenThereIsNoBeer

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"Fourth, we should protect continuous coverage. If you have coverage, and you get sick or injured, your health insurance company shouldn’t be able to cancel your policy or jack up your premiums. That’s the whole point of health insurance."

I think they certainly should be able to.  And you can find another insurer.  But, the original insurer is still on the hook for paying for your treatment for the event that occurred while you were paying them premiums.  That's insurance.
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Offline r9etb

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Several poor assumptions in this article, including the one that says it will be tough for people to defend voting against the 2015 bill they previously voted for.  They've already done that.

Next:

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But the 2015 bill is not enough. So Cruz next focuses on areas that should provide broad consensus for Republicans. They include excellent ideas like “allow[ing] consumers to purchase insurance across state lines,” ensuring the ability to buy “low-cost catastrophic insurance on a nationwide market,” and the use of health savings accounts. These would all have the effect of increasing competition and lowering costs.

Fine: these can be done with piecemeal legislation.  Moreover, such legislation could explicitly do away with some of the provisions for certain kinds of "required" care -- let the insurance companies offer them as riders.

This next part, though, seems not to reflect reality:

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    Third, we should change the tax laws to make health insurance portable, so that if you lose you[r] job you don’t lose your health insurance. You don’t lose your car insurance or life insurance or house insurance if you lose your job; you shouldn’t lose your health insurance either. And that would go a long way to[wards] addressing the problem of pre-existing conditions, since much of that problem stems from people losing their jobs and then not being able to get new coverage on the individual market.

Most people get their health care through their employer -- it's not at all like car or life insurance.  The employer pays at least as much, and often for a lot more, for their employees' health care than do the employees themselves.  So how would that movement from company to company work out, without a butt-load of regulations?  Answer: it wouldn't.

As to pre-existing conditions, I understand that concern on a very personal level: my son has Type I diabetes, well-controlled because our health plan makes the supplies affordable.  I'm worried about how he's going to cope when he's no longer under our plan.  Even so, I really can't see how the mechanics of requiring a new employer to shoulder the burden of that condition can be achieved without either a bunch regulations and increased cost, or some sort of cost-sharing arrangement where somebody has to make up the difference.

Offline IsailedawayfromFR

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"Fourth, we should protect continuous coverage. If you have coverage, and you get sick or injured, your health insurance company shouldn’t be able to cancel your policy or jack up your premiums. That’s the whole point of health insurance."

I think they certainly should be able to.  And you can find another insurer.  But, the original insurer is still on the hook for paying for your treatment for the event that occurred while you were paying them premiums.  That's insurance.
i agree.  An insurance company runs a profit-making business.  No govt edict should force it to lose money.
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Offline Maj. Bill Martin

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Several poor assumptions in this article, including the one that says it will be tough for people to defend voting against the 2015 bill they previously voted for.  They've already done that.

Yeah, most of the criticism of the AHCA begins with "just repeal ObamaCare."  It reminds me of the old Steve Martin bit of how to get a million dollars and not pay any taxes.  "First, get a million dollars.  Then...." 

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Ted should have been President.
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Offline Emjay

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Ted should have been President.

Amen.  But he isn't.

Trump allies should work on convincing him to give Obamacare repeal another try.
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Online Hoodat

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Here’s where it gets tough, because there’s a bitter pill that, in my view, Americans have to swallow: we have to get rid of the ObamaCare provision that requires companies to insure pre-existing conditions.

Amen to that.
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Offline Applewood

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Ted should have been President.

Ted makes too much sense. 

Offline Hondo69

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Liberals think sanctuary cities are super cool and considerable amounts of taxpayer dollars should be spent breaking the law.

OK, I get the idea.  Let's go ahead and expand on that popular theme:

[1] I hereby declare Austin, TX an Obama-Free city and no one here need pay the federal tax for not carrying healthcare insurance.  It is morally wrong to penalize someone for not doing something, period.  Therefore, we will spend any amount of taxpayer dollars defending you in court should it come to that.

[2] Because healthcare insurance discriminates against the poor, middle and upper classes we are eliminating the need to carry a policy at all.  Just walk into any doctor's office, hospital or specialist and we'll pick up the tab at the city taxpayer's expense.

[3] Since ObamaCare was passed illegally and violates our rights as citizens we will refrain from paying any federal taxes whatsoever until it is repealed.  Just Say No to federal taxes.  You may not like it, so sue me.  Laws are really only suggestions anyway so catch me if you can.

Offline Cripplecreek

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Ted makes too much sense.

There are a few liberals who have admitted how much Ted Cruz scares him.

Chris Hayes from 2013.

In october 2007 I sat in the media gallery of the united states supreme court and watched the solicitor general of texas argue on behalf of the state that he should have the ability to put to death a mexican national, Jose Medellín, who had been convicted of raping and murdering two teenage girls in houston. He won that argument and he (Medellín) was executed by texas on august 5th , 2008 , despite the objections of the united nations and the international court of justice . at the time, I had no idea who this man arguing on behalf of texas was. but all I could think was holy crap , this guy is good. it was one of his nine times arguing before the supreme court and he was witty, incredibly fast on his feet and clearly had a brilliant legal mind. it is to this day one of the most impressive displays i have ever seen before the court and i have had the good fortune to spend a lot of time there. so you can imagine my horror in 2012 when i tuned into the texas senate race. i hadn't been paying much attention to. and realized that lieutenant governor david dewhurst , the republican establishment candidate, was being prepared by a tea party candidate who was the same guy i saw kick ass in the supreme court in 2007 . i thought that night, night i made that connection, oh, this is trouble. and trouble that man has been. trouble in every direction. as he vies to be the singular voice of the right wing grassroots and as he has very quickly assumed a leadership role in movement.

http://www.nbcnews.com/video/all-in-/52805483/#52805483


Offline libertybele

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Amen.  But he isn't.

Trump allies should work on convincing him to give Obamacare repeal another try.

I hear what  you're saying, but Trump has already drawn that line in the sand.  He sided with Ryan and the RINO's thinking he was going to get this bill through and it failed. I think Trump saw this as a vote against him and he took it personally.  To save face, he's willing to take his case to the opposition. He doesn't care as long as he himself wins. Obviously Ryan had absolutely no intent on repealing Bammycare and he belongs in Hillary's basket of deplorables and should be forced to step down. Cruz, Paul, Lee, Meadows, etc., hopefully are working with those in the House to push for repeal and replace.
« Last Edit: March 28, 2017, 11:08:08 am by libertybele »
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Offline Hondo69

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Remember the government shutdown?

Both the actual and threatened government shutdowns were two separate events, but share a common thread with the repeal of ObamaCare.  Tea Party Conservatives were viewed by most as ultra radical fanatic Nazi baby killers who were willing to blow Washington's cozy little arrangement sky high.

So called Conservatives from every corner were hammering Ted Cruz and the Tea Party.  The Wall Street Journal, for example, blasted these true Conservatives making the case that government had grown so large and controlled such a huge segment of the economy that a shutdown would upset the fragile balance.  Charles Krauthammer attacked the true Conservatives for not going through the standard legislative process.

Barack Obama promised a shutdown would cause dead babies to be stacked up in the streets.  He also began using the power of the Oval Office to punish veterans groups and any others that supported the true Conservatives.  There was to be hell to pay and he was the man to do it.

Ringing any bells?

Offline Hondo69

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As to pre-existing conditions, I understand that concern on a very personal level: my son has Type I diabetes, well-controlled because our health plan makes the supplies affordable.  I'm worried about how he's going to cope when he's no longer under our plan.  Even so, I really can't see how the mechanics of requiring a new employer to shoulder the burden of that condition can be achieved without either a bunch regulations and increased cost, or some sort of cost-sharing arrangement where somebody has to make up the difference.

You have a very legitimate concern, especially under the current system.  I'll use my own situation to illustrate.

We pay over $1200 per month for our family of 4 - that's a house payment.  I have diabetes and my son has a brain disorder, both fairly expensive pre-existing conditions.  That is already two strikes against us.  But the biggest strike against us is that I am self employed.  This means my family does not get bundled in with any group such as a union, AARP, etc. and within the segment known as the basket of deplorables those people who are self employed are treated as the bottom of the barrel.

Should your son fall off your existing plan then he joins the basket of deplorables.  And, God forbid, he becomes self employed then he might as well be shipped off to a leper colony off the coast onto some tiny island. 

----

Now let's back up to the time before ObamaCare.  We paid roughly $400/mo previously and all the conditions I mentioned were the same.  Had I been able to purchase a policy across state lines we could have obtained a very similar policy for about $100 less.  I know this because we worked closely with a nationwide insurance broker.  So just living in Texas and not having a free market to go outside of Texas we were being penalized $100/mo.

With one little rule change we could have saved 25%.  This also mean my true cost should have been about $300/mo.

You mentioned, "without either a bunch regulations and increased cost", you couldn't see who would shoulder the burden.  You are making the assumption the current cluster f**k called healthcare stays in place.  Yet we know it does not necessarily have to stay in place.

We also know that pre-ObamaCare my family of 4 should be paying about $300/mo for a policy.  Due to the sheer awesomeness of our fearless leaders I pay four times that amount, over $1200/mo.

The answer is not a bunch regulations and increased cost.

Offline r9etb

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You mentioned, "without either a bunch regulations and increased cost", you couldn't see who would shoulder the burden.  You are making the assumption the current cluster f**k called healthcare stays in place.  Yet we know it does not necessarily have to stay in place.

We also know that pre-ObamaCare my family of 4 should be paying about $300/mo for a policy.  Due to the sheer awesomeness of our fearless leaders I pay four times that amount, over $1200/mo.

The answer is not a bunch regulations and increased cost.

Excellent discussion.  Thanks!

Just to be clear, I was really speaking directly to the suggestion in the original post, which basically required insurance for pre-existing conditions to be transferable from employer to employer.  That can only be done through regulation, and it'd be a mess.

My real complaint about the article is that its ideas don't really apply to how most people are covered: through employer-provided health plans.  Nor does it adequately address the difficulties and high costs inherent with trying to cover people with pre-existing conditions. 

If health plans could in some manner be separated from employers then perhaps the OP's suggestions would make more sense (though the simplistic do-this-and-that-will happen reasoning doesn't account for the complexities of real life).  Still, as you've noted, pre-existing conditions are going to be tough.

Insurance companies make money through statistics: they charge premiums based on the probability of having to pay out for medical conditions.  However, the cost to treat my son's diabetes is guaranteed and predictable: from a strictly statistical standpoint, insurance companies have little incentive to charge him any less than they already know he's going to cost them.  The only incentive I can think of, is that the cost of treating a well-controlled diabetic is a lot less than the costs of treating the consequences of being not well-controlled.

Any cost reduction to my son, would have to come either from some sort of cost-sharing arrangement (which is what our current health plan basically is, from his perspective), or the cost of treatment itself would have to come down.

Offline Hondo69

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Any cost reduction to my son, would have to come either from some sort of cost-sharing arrangement (which is what our current health plan basically is, from his perspective), or the cost of treatment itself would have to come down.

Great points  :beer:

In my opinion you've nailed the heart of the issue.  I just quoted a portion to save on space.

People slam insurance companies for being greedy capitalistic bastards that make too much money.  They don't understand the laws of nature.  We want them to make money - oodles and oodles of money.  The more they make the better for you and me.  I'll explain.

If they are making money hand over fist and new competition comes rolling along, then they are more than willing to give up an oodle here or there to stay in the game.  It's no different that drug dealers on the street corner.  They will over charge if there is no competition.  But if they have to compete then they will lower prices and still come out like a bandit.

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In a free market insurance companies will offer every type of plan under the sun.  Plan A may not be transferable from one employer to the next, but Plan B will be transferable.  If they want to compete in the free market they will offer a variety of options in order to stay in the game.  If the demand exists they will work to fill that demand.  No different than your average street corner drug dealer.

A lot of people have pre-existing conditions.  And a lot of people move from job to job.  When you add the two together you have a huge demand they are more than happy to fulfill.

The trick is to cut out the middle man.