New York Post

Just what the doctor ordered

Trump is fixing ObamaCare — and he should be running on that fact

- BRIAN BLASE Blase is a research fellow at the Galen Institute and the Foundation for Government Accountabi­lity, and the president of Blase Policy Strategies LLC. He served as a special assistant to President Trump at the National Economic Council, 2017-19

PRESIDENT Trump will face off with former Vice President Joe Biden in the first presidenti­al debate this week, where health care is bound to come up. While Democrats often attack Trump for a lack of a health-care plan, the truth is, his administra­tion has significan­tly increased Americans’ choice of health coverage and improved access to care. In fact, Trump should be proud to campaign on his health-care record.

When Trump took office, ObamaCare was wreaking havoc with the individual healthinsu­rance market — premiums and deductible­s were escalating, and choices of coverage were dwindling. The Trump administra­tion took steps to shore up these markets and premiums have held flat since 2018, with more insurers now offering plans.

At the same time, his administra­tion also increased options for families and small businesses. A 2018 Trump rule expanded renewable and flexible plans not subject to ObamaCare’s laundry list of expensive requiremen­ts. This rule expanded consumer protection­s for these more affordable plans by allowing people to keep them for up to three years instead of just three months.

Another 2018 rule expanded Associatio­n Health Plans, permitting employers to band together and offer their workers more affordable coverage. This showed initial promise. Unfortunat­ely, a dozen Democratic attorneys general have sued to take away this option and a sympatheti­c judge has so far blocked the rule. The Trump administra­tion has appealed. The White House Council of Economic Advisers finds that Americans receive a yearly net benefit of $45 billion from these expanded coverage options, along with the eliminatio­n of ObamaCare’s regressive individual mandate penalty that mainly hit families earning less than $50,000 per year.

Of all the administra­tion’s actions, the most groundbrea­king rule allows employers to provide contributi­ons using pre-tax dollars so workers can select a plan in the individual health-insurance market that’s best for them. These “health reimbursem­ent arrangemen­ts” (HRAs) hold the potential to revolution­ize employer-sponsored health insurance and dramatical­ly expand worker choice and control, as most employers now only offer their workers a single option for coverage.

The HRA rule demonstrat­es how Trump’s policies are an improvemen­t over ObamaCare for the individual market. ObamaCare priced everyone but the lowest income, who qualify for giant subsidies, out of the individual healthinsu­rance market. In fact, $50 billion a year in premium subsidies has only boosted individual market enrollment by about 2 million people — a staggering $25,000 per newly insured. Trump’s HRA rule will lead to four times as many people purchasing coverage in the individual market with no new federal spending.

While increasing Americans’ coverage options and shoring up the individual market was mission number one, the Trump administra­tion did much more to improve our health-care system. Because of its rules requiring hospitals and insurers to provide price informatio­n, Americans will finally have access to real prices before they access health-care services. Employers will be able to use these prices to negotiate better deals for their workers.

The administra­tion has reformed Medicare so that seniors can more easily receive care in the comfort of their own home over the phone or through video. Through the coronaviru­s public-health emergency, doctors can now be paid for providing virtual care, which can be safer and faster.

Another Trump policy helps the chronicall­y ill save tax-free for their health care. For example, diabetics can make deposits to their health savings accounts for the first time even if they have a plan that covers insulin before meeting their deductible. The president has also taken action to increase kidney donations and dialysis provided in patients’ homes rather than predominan­tly in hospitals and clinics.

And on pharmaceut­icals, the president should tout tangible successes. Overall, drug price inflation was just 1.5 percent from 2017 to 2019, in part from a surge of competitio­n introduced after a historic number of generic drugs were approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion. And the president signed the Right to Try Act, permitting very sick patients to access experiment­al, but potentiall­y lifesaving, treatments.

While the president certainly needs to articulate his vision for future health reform, he has a good health-care record that he can run on now — and he should use the forthcomin­g debates to make this case.

 ??  ?? Democrats complain that President Trump doesn’t have a plan to replace ObamaCare, but he has actually expanded coverage for millions.
Democrats complain that President Trump doesn’t have a plan to replace ObamaCare, but he has actually expanded coverage for millions.
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