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1998 U. Ill. L. Rev. 757 (1998)
Public Choice and Private Insurance: The Case of Small Group Market Reforms

handle is hein.journals/unilllr1998 and id is 767 raw text is: PUBLIC CHOICE AND PRIVATE
INSURANCE: THE CASE OF SMALL
GROUP MARKET REFORMS
Mark A. Hall*
In this response to Professor Richard Epstein's book Mortal
Peril, Professor Hall argues that health care is a partial public
good which invites limited governmental intervention and some el-
ements of social insurance. He therefore takes issue with Professor
Epstein's opposition to small group market reforms. Such reforms
include guaranteed issue, limits on preexisting condition exclu-
sions, and affordability provisions. Professor Hall argues that
small group market reforms help to preserve a private insurance
market as well as a voluntary insurance purchase system. He
agrees with Professor Epstein that such reforms create cross-subsi-
dies and alter how insurers compete, but Professor Hall argues that
these effects have market advantages. Although Professor Hall
further agrees with Professor Epstein that some reforms create
market distortions, Professor Hall has found from his empirical
studies that small market reforms work reasonably well.
I. INTRODUCTION
A. Epstein's Simple World
I grew up in Tennessee, where it is joked that the main crop is
rusty cars. Outside the cities, every third yard has an automobile or
two sitting up on concrete blocks. My own yard was one of the worst
offenders. I grew up fixing my own cars and taking parts from my
brothers' junk heaps when I needed them. Back then, of course, you
could still work on your own car. V-8 and slant-6 engines had their
names because you could actually see the shape of engines. They con-
sisted of simply these basics: the engine, the carburetor, the distribu-
tor, the timing gear, the radiator and water pump, and the ignition/
battery/generator. If anything went wrong, it pretty much had to be
one of these six simple components. Cars were not cluttered with ex-
haust control devices and various computerized elements that require
engineering degrees to identify, let alone service. I was able to do
* Professor of Law and Public Health, Wake Forest University; Visiting Professor, Univer-
sity of Pennsylvania Law School. B.A. 1977, Middle Tennessee State University; J.D. 1981, Uni-
versity of Chicago.

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