Census Bureau data reveal that the uninsured are actually the kind of demographic that consumer product companies dream about. A surprising 85% of the nation's uninsured are currently employed and nearly all have worked in the past year (emphasis mine). They are young -- almost half are between the ages of 18 and 34 -- and nearly three-quarters of the uninsured describe their health as "excellent" or "very good." More than two-thirds have at least some college education and about half earn middle-class incomes.So it seems, most have chosen not to have insurance because they thought they were at low risk of needing it(who knew?). Better stop those people from thinking, dammit!
Second, insurers no longer can afford to ignore the uninsured market. Their core business -- selling group plans to large employers -- is stagnant. A Bain & Company analysis of the health-insurance sector shows that total commercial health-insurance enrollment has been flat at around 174 million people since 2001. In response to rising costs, employers have steadily pared back benefits, and the percent of businesses offering health insurance has fallen to 60% last year from 66% in 1999. Since the 2001 recession, the number of contractors, part-timers and small-business employees has grown two to six times faster than the economy overall. In contrast, traditional workers -- the full-time company employees that provide the insurance companies' bread and butter -- have declined 0.6%. As a result, profit pools in corporate-funded health plans are shrinking.
For insurers, this means that their greatest source of future growth is selling policies to individuals -- not corporations.
So if you're wondering who's direct-to-consumer ads we'll be seeing next alongside the pharmaceutical ads with the evening news, look no further than your friendly
-Wes
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