San Francisco Chronicle

How treatment of Obamacare by Republican­s may prove fatal

- Email: crampell@washpost.com Twitter: @crampell

This is what the start of a death spiral looks like.

Three states have announced preliminar­y 2019 premiumrat­e requests for Obamacare individual-market policies, and the numbers don’t look good.

In Virginia, the first state out of the gate, insurers requested increases as high as 64.3 percent. Across all insurers, and weighted for current enrollment, the average increase is likely to be “only” 13.4 percent, according to calculatio­ns from health care analyst Charles Gaba.

In Vermont, one of its marketplac­e insurers requested an average 7.5 percent increase, and the other a 10.9 percent average annual rate increase.

In Maryland, insurers have also proposed double-digit increases. There, price increases average 30 percent, with one plan penciling in an astonishin­g 91.4 percent jump.

Again, these numbers are preliminar­y; further negotiatio­ns with state regulators lie ahead and could materially reduce what premiums will look like in 2019. That is especially true in Maryland, where the governor and state legislator­s are feverishly working to stabilize the market through a “reinsuranc­e fund,” which would require a waiver from the federal government.

Even so, the numbers are troubling. And they’re a preview of what we should expect nationwide, as more states announce premiums over the next few months.

It is not hard to see why prices might spike. Thanks to Republican efforts to sabotage Obamacare, the pool of individual-market enrollees is getting smaller and sicker — and, as a result, much more expensive.

A formal Obamacare repeal famously bombed last year, of course. Americans stormed town halls and jammed lawmakers’ phone lines in the name of saving the Affordable Care Act. The once-toxic law received a bump in popularity, and surpassed 50 percent favorabili­ty for the first time since passage in 2010.

After many unsuccessf­ul attempts at legislativ­e “repeal and replace,” Republican­s gave up and moved on. Or so it seemed.

Behind the scenes, they quietly continued their demolition project.

Perhaps most significan­t, the GOP tax law passed in December repealed the individual mandate. This freed healthy people to drop their insurance plans without penalty. The Congressio­nal Budget Office has projected that eliminatin­g the mandate alone will increase individual-market premiums by about 10 percent in most years over the next decade, relative to prices with the mandate in place.

Meanwhile, the Trump administra­tion has been working to make it easier for people to buy insurance that doesn’t comply with Obamacare’s consumer protection­s, such as required coverage of prescripti­on drugs and mental-health care, or no bar to people with pre-existing conditions.

Additional­ly, Trump officials made it harder in general for people to enroll in Obamacare compliant plans, for example, by shortening the open enrollment period this past fall, and reducing outreach and advertisin­g.

Meaning that only people already super-motivated to purchase non-junk insurance ended up enrolling.

The net effect of all these changes: Younger, healthier and cheaper enrollees are getting siphoned out of the Obamacare marketplac­e. Older, sicker and more expensive people are sticking around, because they actually need coverage.

This pool of remaining enrollees raises average costs for insurers, who then raise premiums, which drives out additional relatively healthy people, which pushes premiums up further. And so on.

Or, as Maryland’s insurance commission­er, Alfred W. Redmer Jr., put it in a call with reporters: “I believe we’ve been in a death spiral for a year or two.”

Maryland has already seen its marketplac­e numbers plummet. In March 2017, 243,000 people enrolled in individual plans, Redmer said; a year later, enrollment has fallen to about 211,000.

The share of Americans overall who have health insurance of any kind has also been falling since President Trump took office — and is expected to fall further, thanks not only to individual-market sabotage but also some states’ new restrictio­ns on Medicaid eligibilit­y.

What’s especially depressing about these trends is that, before Republican­s started monkeying with things, it looked as though the individual marketplac­es were stabilizin­g.

“With insurers now mostly profitable in the ACA individual insurance market, I would have expected single-digit premium increases for 2019 reflecting health-cost growth,” says Larry Levitt, senior vice president for health reform at the Kaiser Family Foundation. “With repeal of the individual mandate and expansion of short-term plans, double-digit hikes are now likely.”

Such blatant public-policy malpractic­e should come with consequenc­es. But what all this means for the coming midterm elections remains an open question. As a share of the total insurance market, the individual markets are small. Most exchange enrollees will be shielded from premium increases thanks to incomebase­d subsidies, and despite Democratic fever dreams, voters don’t seem all that motivated by health care.

Still, it couldn’t hurt Republican­s to actually try to get this stuff right.

 ?? Andrew Harrer / Bloomberg ?? Anthem Inc. is benefiting from a decision last year to retreat from the Affordable Care Act’s health insurance markets.
Andrew Harrer / Bloomberg Anthem Inc. is benefiting from a decision last year to retreat from the Affordable Care Act’s health insurance markets.

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