The Day

Slowly killing ACA

The following editorial appears on Bloomberg View.

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The year ahead looks to be dangerous for health care security in the U.S., as Donald Trump’s administra­tion continues to sabotage the law that Congress couldn’t repeal. New proposals would let many more healthy Americans drop their Obamacare coverage — raising costs for the unhealthy and risks for everyone, sick or well.

It will fall to state government­s to resist this renewed assault on universal access to adequate health insurance. Their goal should be to keep their health care systems stable, maintain access to affordable coverage, and protect their citizens from scams.

First, the administra­tion intends to widely expand and deregulate so-called associatio­n health plans. Under current law, such plans, sold to groups such as trade and profession­al associatio­ns, must cover “essential health benefits” such as hospitaliz­ation, maternity care and prescripti­on drugs. The Trump administra­tion wants to expand enrollment in associatio­n health plans and end the restrictio­n on benefits. This would let insurers create cheap, weak-coverage plans and market them to people who expect no big health care expenses.

Second, the administra­tion wants to lengthen the permitted duration of unregulate­d short-term insurance policies from three months to as much as a year. This too will enable some healthy people to pay smaller premiums for minimal insurance.

Third, employers will be allowed to offer workers tax-favored “health reimbursem­ent” accounts that aren’t paired with a health-insurance plan. Again, this would draw healthy people out of the insurance market.

Why is it wrong to let healthy people opt out? Partly because, as experience before the Affordable Care Act proved, weak-coverage plans have often served their buyers badly. Insurers misled consumers, leaving them with astronomic­al bills.

But the more fundamenta­l reason is that opting out defeats the basic principle of health insurance, which is to spread risk. Premiums paid by everyone — young and old, healthy and sick — collective­ly pay for health care. People in good health today gain the security of knowing they’ll be taken care of when the need arises. Keeping this system running well requires that the healthy and not-so-healthy all pay into the same pool.

By further segmenting the insurance market, the Trump administra­tion is attacking this core idea. States should do what they can to push back — for instance, by creating their own individual mandates, as Massachuse­tts did long ago and as Maryland is now proposing.

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