Los Angeles Times

Repeal, replace — and fail

- He House GOP

Tleadershi­p’s proposal for repealing and replacing Obamacare would actually leave much of the 2010 Affordable Care Act intact — except for the parts that make it work.

Instead of fixing the problems Republican­s have been complainin­g about, it would make them worse. And rather than making insurance affordable to more people, it would raise costs for lower-income Americans while providing breaks for everyone else.

The bills’ authors don’t seem to be trying to improve the healthcare system; they just seem to be trapped by a promise they made to voters without regard to the damage it might do. In short, it’s a baffling plan with no clear objective that’s deservedly getting blasted from all sides, with conservati­ves, liberals and libertaria­ns all trashing it.

The Affordable Care Act has dramatical­ly slashed the number of uninsured Americans, and in some states (such as California), its reforms have given those not covered by large employer plans a much more consumer-friendly way to buy policies. Other states have implemente­d the act poorly, however, as opposition from state lawmakers and a hands-off approach toward insurers have led to large premium increases and fewer choices for coverage. In a few regions, in fact, large losses threaten to drive insurers out of the individual market completely.

Rather than fixing those problems by following the successful states’ lead, the House bills would strike off in a new direction. Insurers would be allowed to sell policies that cover a smaller percentage of the average customer’s medical costs. They also could charge older customers even more than the ACA allowed, and younger ones less. Insurers would almost certainly respond by churning out more low-premium, high-out-ofpocket-cost plans that are designed to appeal to people who don’t really need health insurance. Meanwhile, those who do need care — for example, parents with asthmatic children or diabetics — would be saddled with ever-more expensive plans.

But it gets worse. The House leaders’ plan would drop the ACA’s individual mandate, which required adult Americans to carry insurance or pay an increasing­ly hefty tax penalty. Instead, it would allow insurers to temporaril­y raise premiums for anyone who’d gone without coverage. That’s a much smaller penalty, increasing the incentive for young and healthy people to skip insurance until they really need treatment. As a consequenc­e, insurers will be left with a sicker, costlier pool of customers not covered by large group plans, driving premiums up and increasing­ly out of reach for those with modest incomes. There are roughly 20 million people in that market today.

The most baffling aspect of the plan is the tax credits for low- and moderate-income households. Unlike the ACA’s subsidies, which are tied to the cost of a policy covering 70% of one’s healthcare costs, the new credits would be tied to a person’s age and would be too small to pay for anything but a barebones plan. One new analysis estimates that once the bill went into effect in 2020, costs would go up for the average customer by more than $2,400 per year — and by more than $4,000 for low-income Americans.

Of course, the tax credit can only be so generous, given that the bills would repeal almost all of the tax increases that helped pay for Obamacare. The result would be a $310billion windfall over 10 years for the wealthiest American taxpayers — and unaffordab­ly high healthcare costs for millions of other, less fortunate citizens. If the Republican­s’ goal is to drive more people off insurance and into hospital emergency rooms, these bills are just the ticket.

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