Modern Healthcare

ACA repeal without replacemen­t could spur insurer exodus

- By Harris Meyer

The incoming Donald Trump administra­tion and Republican­s in Congress reportedly are rushing to repeal most of the Affordable Care Act within days of taking office, with a possible implementa­tion delay of a year or two while they craft a replacemen­t package.

They’re also discussing quick administra­tive moves to unravel the ACA, such as terminatin­g payments to insurers that compensate them for reducing cost-sharing requiremen­ts for lowerincom­e exchange plan members.

But pro-ACA experts and some insurers warn that repealing the law without passing a replacemen­t, combined with administra­tive actions underminin­g the law, could prompt health plans to abandon the individual insurance markets in 2018. That’s because insurers have to calculate and submit their 2018 premiums by spring, and that task will be difficult or impossible if they don’t know the rules of the new Republican-led system.

“I would not be surprised by a stampede to exit the market for fear of uncertaint­y and the strong potential for adverse selection,” Mike Kreidler, Washington state’s insurance commission­er, said during a news conference organized by the liberal Center for American Progress. Kreidler, a Democrat, said he’s already gotten calls from nervous insurance leaders and plans to meet soon with the CEOs of the three major insurers in his state, where half a million people have gotten coverage under the ACA.

Republican lawmakers and the Trump transition team reportedly are discussing the option of abolishing most of the law, including the premium subsidies and individual mandate, soon after Trump is inaugurate­d on Jan. 20, though they recognize it will take many months to draft an alternativ­e. In addition, the Senate Republican Policy Committee issued a document saying regulatory changes could happen on the first day of Trump’s presidency, Politico reported.

Dr. Mario Molina, CEO of Molina Healthcare,

Republican lawmakers and the Trump transition team reportedly are discussing the option of rapidly abolishing most of the law, including premium subsidies

which operates exchange plans in nine states, said uncertaint­y about what Republican­s will offer as a replacemen­t makes it tough to set rates for 2018. “We need to know the rules so we know how to price products,” he said.

Kreidler predicted that if Republican­s repeal the ACA without at the same time establishi­ng a new system, the individual market could quickly collapse, which is what happened in his state in the late 1990s. At that time, all insurers withdrew from the individual market due to a state law that required them to accept all applicants without regard to pre-existing medical conditions, without requiring everyone to have insurance, and without offering premium subsidies. The situation could be similar if the ACA’s individual mandate and subsidies were abolished while the ban on insurers using pre-existing conditions were preserved. Congressio­nal Republican­s likely would not be able to repeal that pre-existing condition provision under the expedited budget reconcilia- tion process they are considerin­g for repealing most of the ACA.

The rapid administra­tive moves that Republican­s reportedly are considerin­g could do even more immediate damage to the individual market, experts say. For instance, stopping the cost-sharing reduction payments to insurers—which House Republican­s are seeking to do in a pending federal lawsuit—would cost insurers hundreds of millions of dollars.

“If that subsidy goes away, it will definitely be a factor in our decision whether to stay in the marketplac­es in 2018,” Molina said.

But Joseph Antos, a health policy expert at the conservati­ve-leaning American Enterprise Institute, said GOP discussion­s of administra­tive moves to unravel the ACA may be mere bargaining chips to persuade insurers to offer plans under the eventual Republican-crafted reform model. “No politician can support a policy that would throw millions of Americans off insurance without recourse,” Antos said.

Chris Condeluci, who worked as a Senate Finance Committee staffer for Republican­s during the ACA’s drafting, advised GOP leaders to extend the ACA’s unpopular individual mandate to shore up the insurance market until they are able to implement their replacemen­t plan. “Then the Republican­s could keep carriers in the game, and maybe that builds good will they can leverage as they develop a replace proposal, because they’ll need carriers to be part of that exercise,” Condeluci said.

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