The Mercury News

Repeal of mandate would remake consumer market

- By Ricardo AlonsoZald­ivar

WASHINGTON >> Millions are expected to forgo coverage if Congress repeals the unpopular requiremen­t that Americans get health insurance, gambling that they won’t get sick and boosting premiums for others.

The drive by Senate Republican­s to undo the coverage requiremen­t under former President Barack Obama’s health care law is a sharp break from the idea that everyone should contribute to health care.

And just as important, it fits neatly with the effort by President Donald Trump’s administra­tion to write new regulation­s allowing for skimpier plans with limited benefits and lower premiums.

Put the two together and the marketplac­e for about 18 million people buying their own health insurance could look very different in a few years. Consumers would have new options with different pluses and minuses. They’d notice a shift away from health plans that cover a broad set of benefits. New winners and losers would emerge.

A poll released Wednesday by the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation found that 55 percent of Americans support eliminatin­g the mandate as part of the GOP tax overhaul while 42 percent are opposed.

Defending the GOP’s move, the Senate’s chief tax writer said Wednesday that the “Obamacare” fines on people who go without coverage amount to a tax on working people. “It’s a terribly regressive tax that imposes harsh burdens on low- and middle-income taxpayers,” said Finance Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch, R-Utah.

Sen. Patty Murray of Washington, the ranking Democrat on the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, said repealing the requiremen­t will undermine insurance markets and raise costs, particular­ly for those who need care. She accused Republican­s of “sneaking devastatin­g health care changes into a partisan bill at the last minute.”

The Congressio­nal Budget Office has estimated that repeal of the insurance requiremen­t would save the government $338 billion through 2027, mainly because fewer people would seek subsidized coverage. That would give GOP lawmakers money to offset some of the tax cuts they’re proposing.

CBO estimates the number of uninsured would rise by 13 million in 2027, reversing coverage gains seen under Obama. Because fewer people would be paying into the insurance pool, premiums for individual plans would rise about 10 percent. Little impact was expected on employer coverage.

Repealing the mandate would be like taking away the stick that nudges people to get comprehens­ive health insurance, while the skimpier plans envisioned by the Trump administra­tion’s regulation writers would be like new carrots introduced into the marketplac­e, said Katherine Hempstead, who directs health insurance work for the nonpartisa­n Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

The result: higher premiums for people who need comprehens­ive health insurance, often those who are older or coping with chronic conditions.

GOP economist Douglas Holtz-Eakin said that he thinks the prediction­s of dire consequenc­es are overstated and that repealing the mandate would be more like a safety valve for a health insurance market that’s pricing out solid middle-class people not entitled to subsidies.

“In the individual market, this is all about getting premiums down so people will want to buy, as opposed to making them have to buy,” HoltzEakin said. A former CBO chief, Holtz-Eakin said he thinks the agency’s current estimates give too much weight to the coverage mandate.

He said nearly 30 million Americans are still uninsured. “We made it illegal to be uninsured, we’re paying people to get insured, and we still have many uninsured,” Holtz-Eakin said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States