Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Enrollment in Obamacare up 17% from ’21

Ranks of American Indian, Black, Hispanic enrollees rise

- AMANDA SEITZ

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion announced Tuesday that it’s seeing an uptick in the number of new customers buying private health insurance for 2023 from the Affordable Care Act’s marketplac­e.

Nearly 3.4 million people have signed up for coverage — an increase of 17% compared with the same time last year. The boost in enrollment comes as the number of uninsured Americans this year reached a historic low of 8%.

“When you have a good product, people will buy it,” Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra told The Associated Press.

More than 665,000 new people have bought plans on the marketplac­e since open enrollment started Nov. 1.

The department didn’t provide any demographi­c details about the new enrollees, but Becerra said he hopes the agency is reaching people in marginaliz­ed communitie­s.

Already this year, the marketplac­e saw significan­t gains in the number of Black Americans, Hispanc Americans and American Indians who sought coverage.

Between 2020-22, the number of Latino enrollees jumped from 1.7 million to 2.6 million, while 1.3 million Black people enrolled last year, up from 900,000 the year before. The number of American Indian enrollees increased from 52,000 to 68,000.

“There’s a very strong chance we’re continuing to get communitie­s that had been left behind to sign up,” Becerra said.

The boost in enrollment is largely driven by generous subsidies — extended through 2025 in the Democrats’ $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief law — that keep monthly premium payments at $0 or just a few dollars monthly for most people who sign up.

People can sign up for coverage on HealthCare.gov or through their state’s marketplac­e by Dec. 15 to get coverage that starts on Jan. 1.

Experts will be watching to see if the strong start to the Affordable Care Act’s open enrollment continues for the next few weeks.

“This demonstrat­es very solid demand for health insurance,” said Massey Whorley, a principal at health consulting firm Avalere.

“Only time will tell if this is truly outsized significan­t growth, or if it is people acting earlier in the open enrollment window.”

The record-low insurance rate in the U.S. could also be disrupted next year, when the government is expected to declare an end to the covid-19 pandemic and boot millions of Medicaid recipients off the coverage.

That could drive more people to the federal marketplac­e in 2023, Whorley added.

“We’re going to be looking at a period of significan­t flux,” Whorley said. “All of this points to more and more people coming into the exchange.”

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