Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Relief plan holds health law boost

Biden touts package provisions that lower cost of premiums

- ALEXANDRA JAFFE AND RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR

COLUMBUS, Ohio — President Joe Biden pledged Tuesday that his $1.9 trillion rescue package would build on the promise of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, the hallmark legislatio­n of Barack Obama’s presidency that became law 11 years ago.

Biden’s covid-19 relief law pumps up health care premium subsidies to address long-standing problems of affordabil­ity, particular­ly for people with middle-class incomes. More taxpayer assistance means, in effect, that consumers who buy their own policies through healthcare.gov will pay hundreds of dollars less out of their own pockets.

“We have a duty not just to protect it, but to make it better and keep becoming a nation where health care is a right for all, not a privilege for a few,” Biden said at the James Cancer Hospital in Columbus, Ohio. “Millions of families will be able to sleep a little more soundly at night because they don’t have to worry about losing everything if they get sick.”

Biden’s speech in the capital of a political battlegrou­nd state is part of a mini-blitz by the White House to highlight the relief package.

The covid-19 legislatio­n cuts premiums paid by a hypothetic­al 64-year-old making $58,000 from $1,075 a month to about $413, based on Congressio­nal Budget Office estimates. A 45-year-old making $19,300 would pay zero in premiums as compared with about $67 on average before the law. People who have even a brief spell of unemployme­nt this year can get a standard plan for zero premium and reduced copays and deductible­s.

“The [Affordable Care Act] is over a decade old, and this is literally the first time that Democrats have been successful at improving it,” said analyst Larry Levitt of the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation. “Democrats have succeeded politicall­y by selling the [Affordable Care Act’s] protection­s for preexistin­g conditions, but affordabil­ity has always been a challenge. And now Democrats have successful­ly improved the premium help available under the law.”

New and existing customers will be able to take advantage of the savings starting April 1 by going to healthcare. gov. States that run their own health insurance markets will offer the same enhanced assistance, though timetables for implementa­tion may vary.

The administra­tion announced Tuesday that people will now be able to enroll for subsidized healthcare.gov coverage until Aug. 15, an extension of three months. Biden has opened up the health insurance markets as part of his coronaviru­s response.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which runs the insurance markets, also said that additional savings for people who’ve been dealing with unemployme­nt will be available through healthcare. gov starting in early July. The richer subsidies were incorporat­ed in the covid-19 relief bill.

By spreading the word about the higher subsidies, the White House is hoping to super-charge enrollment. But the 11 million people who already have private plans through the health law also will benefit.

Republican­s see Biden’s sweeter subsidies as an example of Democratic overreach on the covid-19 bill. Policy consultant Brian Blase, a former health care adviser in the Trump White House, expects most of the additional taxpayer assistance will merely substitute for what private households would have otherwise paid.

Their complaints notwithsta­nding, Republican­s may face a political dilemma. The higher health care subsidies are keyed to the pandemic and expire by the end of 2022. That will let Democrats set up election-year votes to make the new benefits permanent, or add even more.

The covid-19 bill follows Biden’s strategy of building on the Obama-era health law to move the U.S. toward coverage for all.

Another provision offers a dozen or so holdout states led by Republican­s a financial inducement to expand Medicaid to more low-income adults. So far there have been no takers.

 ?? (AP/Evan Vucci) ?? President Joe Biden speaks Tuesday during a tour of the James Cancer Hospital and Solove Research Institute at Ohio State University.
(AP/Evan Vucci) President Joe Biden speaks Tuesday during a tour of the James Cancer Hospital and Solove Research Institute at Ohio State University.

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