Rome News-Tribune

Unusual but welcome

2 health insurers opt to cut rates

- By Andy Miller

Two of the four health insurers in the 2019 Georgia insurance exchange, in a surprising move, are set to make reductions in monthly premiums from the rates they offer this year.

Such decreases in insurance rates rarely occur in health care.

The overall premiums announced Thursday, as approved by the state insurance commission­er, show the relative stability of the state’s exchange, created under the Affordable Care Act for people without job-based or government insurance.

Alliant Health Plans’ premiums will drop by 10 percent, and Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield will have a .3 percent decrease, under rates sent this week by the state regulators to federal officials for review. Approval by the feds is virtually certain.

Those two companies reduced their requested rates from proposed increases of 5.7 percent and 2.2 percent, respective­ly, in their initial submission­s to state insurance regulators earlier this summer.

The other two health insurers in the exchange maintained their initial rates through the approval process. Ambetter of Peach State will offer premiums that are 8.8 percent higher, while Kaiser Permanente kept its original 14.7 percent premium hike for next year’s exchange.

Those increases may reflect the two insurers’ making rate adjustment­s after adding more customers in metro Atlanta, since competitor Blue Cross exited the exchange market for that area this year.

The new Georgia rates come after sharp increases a year ago of more than 50 percent for all four insurers on the state exchange.

The new rate structure “is an indication that insurers are now comfortabl­e with the pool of people buying insurance through the exchange,” said Bill Custer, a health insurance expert at Georgia State University.

Insurers “may have overreacte­d last year” in their big increases in premiums, Custer said.

“Insurers are actually making money on this market,” he said. “The underlying comfort with the exchanges nationally has clearly improved. In Georgia, we’re actually seeing competitiv­eness.”

About 480,000 people bought coverage this year through Georgia’s exchange, which like most state exchanges is run by the federal government.

Mark Mixer, CEO of Alliant Health Plans, cited the Trump administra­tion’s restoratio­n of the “risk adjustment” payments for insurers as a “driving factor” in the nonprofit’s lowering of its original proposal for premiums. The White House froze this funding in July in response to a court decision, then reversed itself.

“Insurance companies try to protect themselves on the risk side when there’s tremendous instabilit­y,” Mixer said Thursday. “Nationally, there’s all indication­s that the market is stabilizin­g.”

Alliant, a nonprofit based in Dalton, covers about 40,000 Georgians in a North Georgia arc of 24 counties. Mixer said Alliant is the only exchange insurer in that region this year, but will face competitio­n there from both Blue Cross and Ambetter next year.

Blue Cross, which pulled out of 74 of Georgia’s 159 counties for this year’s exchange, is expected to provide coverage in 2019 in 135 counties. Those include most of metro Atlanta, where Blue Cross does not currently offer exchange plans.

A Blue Cross spokesman did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Thursday on the company’s exchange premiums.

Federal officials are expected to approve the state premiums about a month from now.

Custer of Georgia State said the biggest beneficiar­ies of the lower rates are those people whose incomes are above 400 percent of the federal poverty level — about $48,000 for an individual, and about $98,000 for a family of four. Such people are not eligible for subsidies or discounts in the exchange, and must pay the full premium.

There’s still some uncertaint­y surroundin­g the exchanges. For one thing, the ACA’s legal requiremen­t for health insurance will end next year. That means some people, including current exchange customers, could choose to buy no coverage at all. Another factor is the White House decision to open the door to alternativ­e types of coverage, the kind that insurers say could pull healthy enrollees out of ACA plans.

In addition, Georgia and 19 other states are challengin­g the ACA in court.

The administra­tion has asked the courts to strike down key elements of the law, including the current protection­s for consumers with pre-existing medical conditions.

Laura Colbert of the consumer advocacy group Georgians for a Healthy Future, which supports the ACA, said Thursday that the rate changes “are encouragin­g signs for Georgia consumers who have had to shoulder several increases over the last few years.”

“The modest rate adjustment­s are a bit surprising because of the federal administra­tion’s antagonist­ic stance toward the Affordable Care Act’s insurance markets,” she said. “If the federal government had used a more handsoff approach, all Georgia consumers could have expected rate decreases this year and those decreases would likely have been more dramatic than those approved for the coming year.”

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