Designed to redistribute income and to fail in making
health insurance affordable for all but lower-income households to put maximal
pressure on moving towards a single-payer system, upon its 2014 implementation
it sent insurance rates skyrocketing. But even as legally people had to purchase
this product (the “individual mandate”), only relatively few in the individual
market did because of subsidization for lower-income households. This meant
some people had to pay four different ways: not only with the higher rates, but
also to government for the subsidies received by lower-income policyholders
that made their costs close to zero, to subsidize a federal reinsurance fund ameliorating
rate hikes, and to finance subsidies to insurers to do the same.
Yet that last expense contravened the Constitution,
and Pres. Donald
Trump wisely cut those off this year. This transpired after 2016, when the reinsurance
fund expired by law. Combined with federal statutory changes that removed the individual
mandate beginning next year, with fewer subsidies to insurers and a patient mix
likely to change that increases costs per insured person, rates likely will continue
upwards.
However, HB 246 by state Rep. Major Thibaut could set the stage to alleviate this upward price pressure. The bill would authorize the state insurance commissioner to obtain federal permission to establish a reinsurance fund. Every insured person would pay a monthly fee – a figure of $1.25 being bandied about – into this, allowing insurers to cap payouts in a certain range – $45,000 to $250,000 being discussed. This may produce another benefit as well: with Obamacare having caused all but three insurers to flee (and one wrote just two policies) after sustaining heavy losses, this could entice more to write.
After Louisianans have suffered so much, with individual
market rates jumping on average 223 percent since Obamacare’s imposition – and taxpayers
feeling the bite as well, since as rates go higher, their subsidization at the
federal level increases also – this move could suppress higher spiraling rates.
But it comes at a cost, the extra fee projected around $15 a year per person. This
essentially universal group of ratepayers would subsidize a relatively small group
who have borne disproportionate personal expense, who also would pay the extra
tax.
In a way, this kind of program mirrors what the state
did with the related part of Obamacare, its Medicaid expansion. It doubled
taxes on health insurance premiums passed along to ratepayers as well as
taxpayers, because it applied to policies through Medicaid for which the public
paid. This transferred wealth from a relatively small group to a larger one.
That would make this consistent with the state’s
populist history, where special interests would get state government to carve
out a benefit paid for by many. At the same time, the unfair burden on the roughly
16,500 Louisianans paying full freight for policies shouts for some kind of
remedy.
As often is the case, if the bill passes the details
will determine whether the sum of those make for a good deal. Repeal and
replacement would provide much better relief not just for the individual market
subset but also generally the public as a whole, but with that effort
apparently moribund for now, the state must seek other solutions in the interim.
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