Can a state force business onto an health exchange?

 

Can a state force business onto an health insurance exchange?

        Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif. (File photo)                   Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif. (File photo)

Republicans are asking whether officials in Vermont and the District of Columbia really have the authority to force some or all health insurance business onto the new Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) exchanges.

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., and other leaders of the House Oversight and Government Reform have sent a letter asking about local officials’ ability to shut down non-exchange markets to U.S. Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.

The lawmakers also have sent similar letters asking about the matter to officials in Vermont and the District of Columbia.

D.C. officials are trying to get all individuals to buy coverage through its district-based exchange, and for all small groups to get their coverage through the exchange by 2015. Health insurance agents and brokers could still sell the coverage but would have to work with the exchange.

Vermont is trying to move its individual and small-group markets onto the Vermont exchange.

The D.C. proposal and the Vermont proposal are “inconsistent with principles of consumer choice and competition,” Issa and colleagues wrote in the letters.

State or D.C. efforts to eliminate non-exchange markets conflict with PPACA, which states that nothing in PPACA is supposed to keep companies from selling coverage outside an exchange or to keep individuals from buying coverage outside an exchange, the lawmakers said.

The D.C. and Vermont efforts to shut down non-exchange markets “violate the principle of voluntary participation in exchanges that was codified in PPACA and reaffirmed in your guidance when you wrote that ‘participation in a [small business exchange] is strictly voluntary for small employers,” the lawmakers told Sebelius.

D.C. officials have argued that they need to unify their individual and small-group markets on the district’s exchange because the district is too small to have successful, separate exchange and non-exchange markets.

In Vermont, state officials told the Associated Press that they believe PPACA gives states broad authority over regulation of any non-exchange health insurance markets under their jurisdiction and clearly gives states the authority to impose rules that are more strict than the rules imposed by PPACA.

Boehner: Obamacare ‘Train Wreck,’ ‘Unworkable’.

The announcement tonight of the delay of part of the implementation of Obamacare prompted Speaker of the House John Boehner to release this statement, saying the entire bill is a “train wreck” and “unworkable.”

boehner, john 

 

“The president’s health care law is already raising costs and costing jobs. This announcement means even the Obama administration knows the ‘train wreck’ will only get worse. I hope the administration recognizes the need to release American families from the mandates of this law as well. This is a clear acknowledgment that the law is unworkable, and it underscores the need to repeal the law and replace it with effective, patient-centered reforms,” the statement reads.

White House delays employer mandate requirement until 2015.


White House delays employer mandate requirement until 2015

By Sarah Kliff, Updated:

The Obama administration will not penalize businesses that do not provide health insurance in 2014, the Treasury Department announced Tuesday.

Instead, it will delay enforcement of a major Affordable Care Act requirement that all employers with more than 50 employees provide coverage to their workers until 2015.

(Photo by Jessica Rinaldi/Reuters)

(Photo by Jessica Rinaldi/Reuters)

The administration said it would postpone the provision after hearing significant concerns from employers about the challenges of implementing it.

“We have heard concerns about the complexity of the requirements and the need for more time to implement them effectively,” Mark Mazur, Assistant Secretary for Tax Policy, wrote in a late Tuesday blog post. “We recognize that the vast majority of businesses that will need to do this reporting already provide health insurance to their workers, and we want to make sure it is easy for others to do so.”

The Affordable Care Act requires all employers with more than 50 full-time workers provide health insurance or pay steep fines. That policy had raised concerns about companies downsizing their workforce or cutting workers’ hours in order to dodge the new mandate.

In delaying the enforcement of that rule, the White House sidesteps those challenges for one year. It is also the second significant interruption for the Affordable Care Act, following a one-year delay on key functions of the small business insurance marketplaces.

Together, the moves could draw criticism that the administration will not be able to put into effect its signature legislative accomplishment on schedule.

 

Will Small Firms Self-Insure After Jan. 1, 2014?

Starting Jan. 1, 2014, the Affordable Care Act (ACA) will bring about significant changes in the regulatory landscape for small firms offering health insurance to their employees.

Regulations affecting small firms include “guaranteed issue” and “guaranteed renewal” which require health insurers to offer and renew plans to all enrollees, regardless of health status. Additionally, three-to-one age rate banding will require that the premium paid by the oldest adult enrollee in a health plan will not exceed the premium paid by the youngest adult enrollee by more than a factor of three for the same set of benefits. Such regulations could have the effect of raising premiums for firms with young and healthy workers.

The ACA’s small group regulations will apply to firms with 100 or fewer workers. The impact of ACA’s regulations could be particularly strong for firms with 51 to 100 workers, because health plans available to firms with 50 or fewer workers are already subject to significant regulation, including guaranteed issue requirements, under federal and state law.

Because of the ACA’s regulations, some smaller employers with young and healthy workers are considering avoiding the purchase of health care coverage in the regulated market, opting instead to self-insure their employees. Firms that self-insure pay directly for employees’ health care expenses, and assume the financial risk associated with unpredictable health costs incurred by employees and their family members.

Historically, concerns about these financial risks have dissuaded most small firms from self-insuring. According to the most recent Kaiser Family Foundation Survey, only 15 percent of insured workers at firms with fewer than 200 employees are enrolled in self-insured plans, compared to 81 percent of insured workers at larger firms. However, if their premiums increase due to regulations, small employers may find self-insurance more attractive. This will have broader consequences. If small firms with young and healthy workers self-insure, premiums could increase for firms remaining on the regulated market.

RAND has developed the COMPARE computer micro-simulation model, which uses what is known about the health care system to estimate what will happen as a result of changes such as those prescribed under the ACA. Recent RAND work provides estimates of the proportion of small firms that will self-insure after implementation of the ACA. These simulations suggest that a critical factor affecting self-insurance decisions will be the pricing and availability of stop-loss coverage, a type of reinsurance for self-insured firms.

One common type of stop-loss policy reimburses the self-insured firm if an enrollee’s health care claims exceed a specific dollar value, called the attachment point. An attachment point of $10,000 per enrollee is considered generous. COMPARE predicts that a large proportion of small firms will self-insure only if generous stop-loss coverage becomes widely available, at an affordable price.

Moreover, COMPARE predicts that such increases in self-insurance would occur even if the ACA were not implemented, as long as affordable and comprehensive stop-loss coverage is available. Therefore, we estimate that any increase in self-insurance would be due to the availability of generous stop-loss coverage, not to a strong interest in avoiding ACA regulations.

Will small firms self-insure? The answer will largely depend on actions taken by stakeholders other than small employers, namely, companies selling stop-loss coverage, and the government. There are already many signs that insurers are trying to lure small firms into self-insuring by advertising low stop-loss attachment points. This inducement to self-insurance could be counterbalanced by government action, in order to maintain a balance of healthy and less healthy employees across the marketplace (including the exchanges, the regulated market outside the exchanges, and the self-insured market).

Currently only a handful of states impose limits on how low attachment points can be set. What should the government do to maintain balance among the different segments of the small business health insurance market? One option is to mandate limits on stop-loss attachment points so as to discourage small firms from self-insuring. However, this option could have the drawback that consumers in self-insured plans would have less financial protection in the event that their firms self-insure.

This commentary appeared on The RAND Blog on June 17, 2013.

Individual Health Insurance Rates to Soar In California

Individual Rates to Soar In California

soaringhealthcostsExpanded enrollment of a sicker population will drive up rates for individual health plans in 2014, according to a study by Milliman for Covered California, the state’s health exchange. The average premium increase will be an astounding 30.1% for people who make too much to receive the subsidy (more than $93,700 for a family of four or $45,960 for an individual).

However, Californians who will qualify for the highest premium tax credits, due to their income, will see an average drop of 85% in what they pay for health coverage. Depending on the individual’s choice of health plan, this premium tax credit could cover a higher percentage of the premium. There are 1 .6 million people uninsured and eligible for subsidies. Many of them could have 100% of their premiums covered through the Affordable Care Act. Those who make less money will be eligible for larger federal tax credits to make their health care more affordable. Households earning from 138% to 250% of the federal poverty level will likely see an average drop of 85% in what they pay for health coverage. Households earning 250% to 400% of federal poverty level will pay on average 45% less, for more coverage with lower copay and deductibles, than what they would have paid for an individual plan in 2013.

Health Insurance Exchange. What To Expect In 2014.

The Basics Of Health Insurance Exchanges.

As part of the Affordable Care Act (ACA or health care reform law), starting in 2014
all Americans must have a minimum amount of health insurance or be taxed by the
government. The law also requires each state to have a health insurance exchange
where people can buy health insurance coverage. People who don’t get health
insurance at work, or can’t afford it, may be able to get it through an exchange. The
exchanges do not replace buying health insurance privately. They are simply a new
place to shop and buy.

Exchange plans will be offered in a tiered format. The tiers are named
after metals: bronze, silver, gold, & platinum.  Each tier will have
several plans to choose from and will include essential health benefits.
Bronze plans will have the lowest monthly premium, but cost shares will
be more when health care services are provided. Platinum plans will
have the highest monthly premium, but cost shares will be less.

All plans must include “essential health benefits” as defined by the
health care reform law. Specifically, the plans must include items and
services from at least these 10 categories of care:*

1. Ambulatory patient services

2. Emergency services

3. Hospitalization

4. Maternity and newborn care

5. Mental health and substance use disorder services, including behavioral
health treatment

6. Prescription drugs

7. Rehabilitative and habilitative services and devices

8. Laboratory services

9. Preventive and wellness services and chronic disease management

10. Pediatric services, including oral and vision care

Subsidies & Credits For Individuals:

Those who don’t have access to affordable, minimum essential health
coverage can buy a health plan from the exchange and get a credit or
subsidy if they meet income requirements. Credits and subsidies help
with the cost of premiums and out-of-pocket health care expenses.

Income requirements:

133% to 400% of federal poverty level

For an individual that equals $15,282 to $45,960 per year (in 2013).

For a family of four that equals $31,322 to $94,200 per year (in 2013).

Government’s Expanding Role In Providing Health Care

Our Government’s Expanding Role in Providing Health Care

One overarching critical question about health care reform is, “What exactly should government’s role be in the American health care system?”

This is a complex question, and your answer to this question—perhaps more than any other aspect of the issue—probably determines how you feel about the Patient Protection and Affordable Act (PPACA). Whatever else the new law does or doesn’t do, one thing is certain: It significantly changes the government’s role in U.S. health care.

Let’s consider the possibilities—all of which exist in varying degrees and combinations around the globe:

  • Minimal Role—Governments of less-developed nations often play a minimal role in regulating and providing health care.
  • Safety Regulator—For safety and health, governments at the regional or national level often license health care providers and regulate medicine and medical devices.
  • Purchaser and Partial Provider of Health Care Services—Governments, including the U.S. federal government, often provide health insurance benefits as employers. Governments may also directly provide or pay for medical services to certain groups of people, such as the elderly, active military personnel, or veterans.
  • Marketplace Regulator—In some nations, government tightly regulates the business practices of the health care system and even requires residents to purchase health insurance.
  • Primary or Sole Provider of Health Care—Elsewhere, governments operate national health care systems, often funded directly by taxation. Also known as single-payer systems, the government in these systems is the sole provider of health insurance coverage and may also manage many aspects of health care delivery. Health care providers may be government employees, and hospitals government-run.

Most Americans recognize the need for some level of medical safety regulation. It also makes sense for government agencies to provide employees with health insurance benefits, just like many private-sector employers.

Before PPACA, U.S. and state governments played the roles of safety regulator, purchaser and partial provider, and limited marketplace regulator. The new health care reform law, if fully implemented, will drastically change the government’s role in health care.

Lawmakers originally wanted the federal government to become the central provider of health insurance. As enacted, the health care law does not go this far, but it does make government into a large-scale regulator of the health care marketplace. Because PPACA threatens market-based competition, quality, and innovation, while limiting choices and options for American consumers, it is, arguably, a dramatic first step towards a single-payer system in which the government could become the sole provider of health care insurance and services.

Health Care Reform

Health Care Reform

Penalty 101: Arguably, the most critical component of the Affordable Care Act, the individual mandate requires every American to either carry health insurance or face a fine.  Last month, a Congressional Budget Office analysis estimated that 11-12 million uninsured Americans would be subject to the individual mandate, with more than half expected to pay the fine rather than obtain coverage.  What that means is that, beginning in 2014, many consumers who can afford health insurance but elect to go without, must pay penalties to the IRS when they file their taxes the following year.  And, while these penalties start off small, they ramp up to their full levels by 2016.  But, due to the inherent confusion accompanying full implementation, it is believed that more people than previously estimated may face the penalty.

 

Individual Health Insurance

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