I feel like we've been in this argument before, and I like you just fine as a commenter, but do feel like you're tying yourself into knots to avoid a simple conclusion plainly supported by the data. I didn't post a trend story about what companies are doing or who they're acquiring; I posted the macro NHE table from last year. It simply refutes the argument you're trying to make.
> I posted the macro NHE table from last year.
Again: how will the “insurers force provider costs up” show up in said tables?
It’s caused by the insurer. It shows as a provider’s cost. But it doesn’t mean said doc is making any more money at the end of the day.
The insurer does, though! Their 20% cut got bigger, and the "computer says no" denials are cheap!
TL;DR: Where in your link does "doc spends needless hours on phone fighting insurer" show up as a cost?