Obviously private insurance companies should be able to do whatever they want, I'm very surprised they can't already charge higher premiums to smokers
Smokers shouldn't pay any additional tax etc.. because tax on ciggarettes already more than covers any additional cost to the public health system
The best part of this thread is that it was started on a false premise.
Those who die decades earlier due to illnesses caused by excessive and long term smoking/drinking/eating habits end up *saving* the healthcare system money by dying earlier than someone who will spend years in and out of it in the extra 20 years of their life.
But they would cost the private health insurers disproportionately more, because the private insurers don't receive the additional tax benefit smokers pay per pack, and they will receive fewer years of premiums and assume higher risk, for no cost reduction.
Non-smokers do subsidise the health care cost of smokers in the case of private insurance.
I think government should have some say given that I think in this case there are mutual benefits. The government (and insurers) benefit from having more people on private health insurance, and the insurers benefit from having a well funded public system. Given the rebate offered by the government I think they deserve a degree of regulation.
If they introduce the ability to legislate for higher premiums for smokes this will:
1. Make insurance relatively cheaper for non-smokers, everyone else
2. Provide further financial disincentive to smoke, improving health nationally
'mutual benefits'
only if you tax overweight people, unintelligent people, alcohol and hereditary diseases while you do it.
It's not a tax, and I'd be similarly surprised if people with existing severe hereditary diseases, morbidly obese, and alcoholics, were able to purchase insurance at all, or without at least a significant premium increase.