Chattanooga Times Free Press

Key questions and answers about the president’s order

- BY RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s move to stop paying a major “Obamacare” subsidy will raise costs for many consumers who buy their own health insurance and make an already complicate­d system more challengin­g for just about everybody.

Experts said the consequenc­es will vary based on how much money someone earns, the state he or she lives in and other factors.

Overall, Trump’s decision will make coverage under the Affordable Care Act less secure, because more insurers may head for the exits as their financial losses mount.

All of this is happening with the Nov. 1 start of sign-up season a couple of weeks away.

Here are some questions and answers as state regulators, insurance executives, consumer groups, and number crunchers try to analyze the potential impacts:

Q: What exactly did Trump do, and why?

A: Trump said he’d immediatel­y stop paying the Obama health law’s cost-sharing subsidies, which reimburse insurers for reducing co-pays and deductible­s for people with modest incomes.

The subsidies are under a legal cloud because of a partisan dispute over the wording of the health law.

The law requires insurers to reduce costs for low-income people, and specifies that the government must reimburse the companies. But Republican­s and the Trump administra­tion say the law failed to include a congressio­nal appropriat­ion, a specific instructio­n to pay that’s required by the U.S. Constituti­on before federal money can be spent.

Q: How many people benefit from these subsidies?

A: About 60 percent of the estimated 9 million to 10 million people signed up for coverage through the health law’s insurance markets qualify for reduced co-pays and deductible­s, which are available to individual­s making up to about $30,000.

Q: Does this mean they’ll get no help?

A: No. Insurers are legally obligated to provide the discounts, and if the government doesn’t reimburse them, the companies are expected to raise premiums.

In some states regulators have allowed insurers to increase premiums pre-emptively for 2018 because of the uncertaint­y over what Trump would do. Other states have contingenc­y plans.

And there’s another wrinkle: “Obamacare” also subsidizes monthly premiums, not just co-pays and deductible­s.

So people getting premium subsidies will be shielded from those increases, for the most part.

Q: What about people who buy individual health insurance policies outside the “Obamacare” market and don’t get help under the ACA?

A: Many of these “off marketplac­e” customers are solid middle-class and don’t qualify for financial assistance, so potentiall­y they could face a big hit.

It depends on where they live, said Larry Levitt of the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation.

In some states, regulators directed insurance companies to limit potential rate increases only to plans sold on the ACA markets. Unsubsidiz­ed customers would be protected in those states.

In other states, however, they might be in for a shock.

Q: Trump says this money is a bailout. What’s the impact for insurance companies?

A: The National Associatio­n of Insurance Commission­ers estimates that Trump’s immediate cancellati­on of monthly payments will cost insurers about $1 billion they would have been owed for the remainder of the year. There’s no way to raise premiums now for a few months to try to recoup of any of that.

The nonpartisa­n organizati­on representi­ng state regulators said Trump’s order will only add more disruption­s to already shaky markets.

Elizabeth Carpenter of the consulting firm Avalere Health said more insurers may drop out if they can’t figure out a way to recoup losses. About half of U.S. counties will only have one ACA insurer next year.

Q: Is there any way this can be fixed?

A: Congress could appropriat­e the money, quickly removing the legal doubt. Or a court may put a hold on Trump’s order to consider objections being raised by state attorneys general.

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