Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Study: Action against ACA may backfire on president

- By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar and Meghan Hoyer Associated Press

WASHINGTON — In an odd twist, low-income people in about half of U.S. counties will now be able to get a taxpayer-subsidized “Obamacare” policy for free, according to a new study that suggests some actions by President Donald Trump against the health law could backfire.

Monday’s analysis of government data by the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation runs counter to the perception of staggering across-the-board increases in costs for consumers under the Affordable Care Act. It could become a springboar­d for marketing pitches by insurers as they try to sign up more consumers when open enrollment starts Nov. 1.

The study found that in 1,540 counties a hypothetic­al 40-year-old making $25,000 a year can get a basic “bronze” plan under the ACA next year for zero monthly premium.

It’s partly as a result of administra­tion actions that raised the underlying cost of insurance, leading to higher federal spending for premium subsidies.

The final number of counties with available free plans is certain to be higher because the Kaiser study examined only the 39 states using the federal HealthCare.gov website for signups.

In those states, nearly 60 percent of counties will have free bronze plans.

“Because of the way that premiums are set this year, people have to shop around to make sure they are getting a plan that makes sense for them,” said Gary Claxton, a co-author of the report. “Telling people that the choice is to pay a penalty (for being uninsured) or take a free plan is a pretty attractive propositio­n.”

The Kaiser what’s study illustrate­s happening under the hood as the complicate­d moving parts of the health law’s different subsidies and coverage levels respond to actions by the administra­tion. The president is still vowing to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare.

Trump recently shut off government subsidies to insurers that were aimed at providing lower copays and deductible­s to people with modest incomes, citing legal questions about whether those payments were properly approved by Congress.

But insurers have raised premiums, which are also subsidized.

Think of pushing down on one end of a see-saw and the other end goes up.

Because consumers can use their premium subsidy to buy any level of coverage, that money can be enough to cover the full price of a lower-cost bronze plan.

This year consumers in some areas had access to zero-premium bronze plans, but Claxton said for 2018 it will be many more people.

Bronze plans are not for everybody, since they typically have annual deductible­s of $6,000 or more. But they may appeal to younger people or those who expect to have just a few doctor visits over a year.

In Texas, for instance, roughly 80 percent of counties will have a zero-premium bronze plan in 2018. Currently more than a quarter-million current ACA enrollees in those counties have low incomes that could potentiall­y qualify them for a no-cost plan. But no Texas counties had a no-cost plan in 2017.

In Florida, which will also have no-cost bronze plans for the first time, almost 1 million current enrollees who have low incomes that could qualify them also live in a county where a no-cost plan will be offered.

Because of other considerat­ions, like age, not all of them will qualify for a no-cost plan, but many will.

“The availabili­ty of zerodollar or ultra low-cost plans has a huge impact on consumer decision making,” said Joshua Peck, a former Obama administra­tion official involved with an independen­t campaign to promote sign-ups. “The chief question is whether consumers will know that they exist.”

Sign-up season starts Wednesday and ends Dec. 15. About 9 million to 10 million people have private plans through the ACA, with more than 80 percent getting subsidies.

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