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Thursday, 7 November 2013

Canceled policies could be a plus for new markets


This photo taken Nov. 6, 2013 shows Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius testifying on Capitol Hill in Washington before the Senate Finance Committee. Insurance cancellations are fueling a political backlash against President Barack Obama and Democrats who supported his health care overhaul, but they may also be an economic silver lining for the health law itself. It’s Economics 101, but there are winners and losers. By shifting people who are currently insured into the new health care markets, it would reduce risks, bringing in customers already known to insurers. That’s painful for those who end up paying higher premiums, but taxpayers could come out ahead. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
WASHINGTON  — Insurance cancellations are fueling a political backlash against President Barack Obama and Democrats supporting his health care overhaul, but they may be a silver lining for the law itself.
Millions of people who currently buy their own health insurance coverage are losing it next year because their plans don't meet requirements of the health care law. Experts say the resulting shift of those people into the new health insurance markets under Obama's law would bring in customers already known to insurers, reducing the overall financial risks for each state's insurance pool.It's Economics 101, a little-noticed consequence of a controversial policy decision. And there are winners and losers.
That's painful for those who end up paying higher premiums for upgraded policies. But it could save money for the taxpayers who are subsidizing the new coverage.
"Already-insured people who do roll over will improve the risk pool, not hurt it," said David Axene, a California-based actuarial consultant for health plans, hospitals, government programs and employers.
Compared to the uninsured, people with coverage are less likely to have a pent-up need for medical services, he explained. They may have already had that knee replacement instead of hobbling around on a cane. They're also more likely to have seen a doctor regularly.
"The current individual market enrollees are definitely a good addition to the risk pool," concurred Larry Levitt, an insurance expert with the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation.
At some point, all these customers had to pass extensive medical screening that insurers traditionally use to screen out people with health problems. Such filtering will no longer be allowed starting next year, and a sizable share of the uninsured people expected to gain coverage under Obama's law have health problems that has kept them from getting coverage. They'll be the costly cases.
Obama had sold his health care overhaul as a win all around. Uninsured Americans would get coverage and people with insurance could keep their plans if they liked them, he said. In hindsight, the president might have wanted to say that you could keep your plan as long as your insurer or your employer did not change it beyond certain limits prescribed by the government.
That test proved too hard for many plans purchased directly by individuals, leading to a wave of cancellations. The new plans generally guarantee a broader set of basic benefits and provide stronger financial protection in cases of catastrophic illness.
"There is change coming to the individual marketplace with consumer protections that many people have never enjoyed or experienced," Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius told senators this week.
But better coverage also costs more.
"The loser is the consumer who is paying higher premiums to subsidize Obamacare, and who was paying lower premiums because they were in another plan before," said Bob Laszewski, a health care industry consultant critical of the law.
Ian Hodge of Lancaster, Pa., fears he'll lose out financially. He and his wife are in their early 60s, so Hodge said "we really don't worry about maternal care," one of the guaranteed benefits in the new plans. The Hodges recently got a cancellation notice and they're concerned a new plan may costs them hundreds of dollars more than they are paying now.
"We are the persons who President Obama wants to pay more in health care so we can subsidize some of the people who will pay less," said Hodge.
A new analysis backs up his instinct. The study by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that people who already have individual coverage, like the Hodges, are less likely to qualify for the tax credits that will make coverage more affordable through the health law's insurance markets.
According to the findings, 73 percent of potential customers who are uninsured will be eligible for tax credits that limit their premiums to a fixed percentage of their income. However, fewer than 40 percent of those who currently have individual health insurance will qualify.
In Congress, the Republican-controlled House is expected to vote next week on legislation permitting insurance companies to continue selling individual policies already in existence, even if they fall short of the law. The vote could pose a difficult choice to Democrats, who favor the law but also have been critical that it does not live up to Obama's pledge that anyone liking their coverage can keep it.
Separately, Senate legislation was introduced during the day to provide for a one-year delay in the law's requirement for individuals to purchase insurance or pay a penalty. Under the measure, backed by Sens. Mark Kirk, R-Ill., and Joe Manchin, D-W. Va., the requirement would take effect on Jan. 1, 2015.


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