I don’t have any opinion about whether your health insurance plan should cover the cost of birth control or whether it should let you get the stuff with no co-pays.
If that’s important to you, then you ought to choose a provider who offers it (assuming it’s popular enough for someone to offer it). If it’s not important to you or if you’re opposed to birth control, you should choose a provider that doesn’t offer it — since the lack of that cost to the provider will lower your premium.
Simple, right? It’s the market making choices about what people value and are willing to pay for.
But that’s not the way it is when the coercive state is involved. The latest example came today when the Obama administration announced that starting in just under 18 months, insurance companies will be required to cover birth control. Further, the companies won’t be allowed to charge a co-pay. Even if it’s unprofitable, companies will be paying for birth control for any customer who wants it.
Words on paper don’t give governments the right to rob us
Two sets of rules: One for the public and a very different set for police
Romantic love is part obsession, part reality — and part madness
UPDATE: After surgery, maybe I’ll eventually start feeling better
My best advice: Choose the person you don’t want to live without
Fear of making trade-offs to get best life leaves us with nothing
Not having someone to hope for differs from pain of missing love
Not satire this time: In New Zealand, one model cries discrimination
Just $12 fed mom and her girls, but bigger challenges lie ahead