Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

riversedge

(70,187 posts)
Fri May 18, 2018, 11:29 AM May 2018

NEW: GOP sabotage will spike average premiums for an individual OVER $1,000 nationally in 2019

The cruel #trump sabotage is working



Topher Spiro Verified account @TopherSpiro
2h2 hours ago

NEW: GOP sabotage will spike average premiums for an individual by more than $1,000 nationally in 2019. Here is a state-by-state breakdown:





State-by-State Estimated Premium Increases due to Individual Mandate Repeal and Short-Term Plan Rule


https://www.americanprogress.org/issues/healthcare/news/2018/05/18/450943/state-state-estimated-premium-increases-due-individual-mandate-repeal-short-term-plan-rule/
By Thomas Huelskoetter Posted on May 18, 2018, 6:30 am


Last year, as part of the tax law, Congress eliminated the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate penalty. Given the mandate’s important role in encouraging healthier people to enroll in the marketplaces, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that, in 2019, this will increase average premiums in the individual market by 10 percent.

Furthermore, in February 2018, the Trump administration proposed a rule to expand short-term health insurance plans. As indicated by their name, short-term plans are intended as temporary insurance coverage, generally to help people manage transitions between different sources of coverage. Yet the Trump administration’s rule would expand their duration so that they could become a long-term source of coverage. These plans generally do not comply with the ACA’s protections for people with pre-existing conditions.

Along with the repeal of the individual mandate penalty, this expansion of short-term plans will drive up average premiums for ACA-compliant coverage in the individual market. ......................................
........................................


Background on individual mandate repeal and short-term plan rule

The individual mandate was an important complement to the ACA’s consumer protections, including the ban on insurers discriminating against people with pre-existing conditions. Without the individual mandate, some healthier enrollees may decide to go without coverage and wait until they get sick to enroll. Since this would leave the remaining pool of enrollees less healthy on average, it would thereby drive up average premiums in the marketplaces.

Similarly, short-term plans also pose a threat to marketplace stability. The Trump administration’s proposed rule would significantly expand the scope of short-term plans compared with the current regulations. It would lengthen the allowable duration of short-term plans from three months to 12 months, and it would permit them to be continually renewed by the issuer. By enabling short-term plans to function as an annual, renewable source of insurance, the rule would effectively turn them into a parallel market for insurance.

This expansion is problematic because short-term plans are exempt from the ACA’s consumer protections. As a result, short-term plans can discriminate against people with pre-existing conditions; impose lifetime or annual dollar limits on coverage; and charge women higher premiums than men. They are also not required to cover all of the ACA’s essential health benefits; short-term plans often exclude important benefits—such as maternity care, mental health care, and prescription drugs—from coverage. A recent review of the short-term plans offered across the country by two insurers found that out of more than 600 short-term plan options, on average, only 29 percent covered prescription drugs while not a single plan covered maternity care.



Due to these limitations, people who enroll in short-term plans may find that these “junk plans” do not cover the care that they will eventually need
. Furthermore, short-term plans have the potential to divert healthier people from the ACA’s insurance marketplaces, weakening the risk pool and driving up average marketplace premiums—including for people with pre-existing conditions, who would largely be locked out of the short-term plan market.

Analysis


Combined, the recent tax law’s repeal of the individual mandate and the administration’s short-term plan rule will undermine the individual insurance market and increase premiums for ACA-compliant coverage.

............................... Results for all states are displayed in Table 1.




...........................................
Conclusion


Although these estimated premium increases are significant, the cumulative premium increase is even greater. After all, through previous acts of marketplace sabotage, the Trump administration has already unnecessarily driven up 2018 premiums for ACA-compliant coverage. For example, last year, CAP estimated that the Trump administration’s decisions to cancel cost-sharing reduction payments and to undermine enforcement of the individual mandate would increase average benchmark premiums for a 40-year-old by $1,061.

The Trump administration’s repeal of the individual mandate penalty and proposed short-term plan rule are a continuation of a long trend of actions that have weakened the individual market risk pool and have increased marketplace premiums.

Thomas Huelskoetter is the policy analyst of Health Policy at the Center for American Progress.

Get the Latest on Health Care
Press Contact
Colin Seeberger
cseeberger@americanprogress.org
Government Affairs Contact
Ryan Collins
rcollins@americanprogress.org
Upcoming Events

Monday May 21, 2018 01:00 PM
Dark Money and the Federal Courts: The Secretive Push to Weaponize the First Amendment

More Events
Press Room

STATEMENT: Trump-Pence Domestic Gag Rule Will Deprive Millions of Women Access to Full Range of Health Care Services
RELEASE: Health Care Sabotage Will Increase Insurance Premiums by More Than $1,000 Next Year
RELEASE: New Report Finds Mothers With Part-Time Jobs Do More Labor Than Fathers With Full-Time Jobs

More Press

7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
NEW: GOP sabotage will spike average premiums for an individual OVER $1,000 nationally in 2019 (Original Post) riversedge May 2018 OP
Kick dalton99a May 2018 #1
K&R... spanone May 2018 #2
Please pass to all you know and to your Rep and Senators and social media sites. riversedge May 2018 #3
+1 dalton99a May 2018 #4
Rest assured that those extra dollars ... GeorgeGist May 2018 #5
I will no longer be able to afford insurance. louis-t May 2018 #6
I have been calculating this last few hours wondering what to give up. riversedge May 2018 #7
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»NEW: GOP sabotage will sp...