I fear that more health plan buyers on Covered California are going to buy bronze plans, with their $6,000 deductibles, in 2016 than in 2015.
That probably means that more low-income buyers are likely to forgo Cost Sharing Reduction (CSR) subsidies, which are available only with silver plans. Under California's standardized benefit design in 2016, silver plans have a $75 deductible for buyers with incomes under 150% of the Federal Poverty Level ($17,655 for a single person) and a $550 deductible for buyers up to 200% FPL ($23,540).
Silver plan premiums can be hard for low income people to afford, particularly at the upper reaches of eligibility (weaker CSR is available up to 250% FPL). For someone earning $23,000, the benchmark second-cheapest silver plan costs $121 per month.
In some regions the cheapest silver plan is considerably less, though, and bronze plan prices vary widely. In a prior post, I demonstrated that in California regions where the price difference between cheapest silver and cheapest bronze was smallest, silver plan selection was highest. In parts of LA County where the spread was just $20 for a 40 year-old earning $23,000, 70.5% of enrollees bought silver and 18.3% bought bronze. In the Eastern Counties, where the spread was generally over $100, just 41.5% bought silver and 55.8% bought bronze.
In 2016, bronze-silver spreads have widened, at least in the 12 of 19 pricing regions I spotlighted earlier. In some regions silver "discounts" narrowed, because the cheapest silver plan is closer to the benchmark; in others, cheaper bronze plans are on offer in 2016 than in 2015; and in some, both changes have taken place (in some regions, too, one change or the other is in the opposite direction).
That probably means that more low-income buyers are likely to forgo Cost Sharing Reduction (CSR) subsidies, which are available only with silver plans. Under California's standardized benefit design in 2016, silver plans have a $75 deductible for buyers with incomes under 150% of the Federal Poverty Level ($17,655 for a single person) and a $550 deductible for buyers up to 200% FPL ($23,540).
Silver plan premiums can be hard for low income people to afford, particularly at the upper reaches of eligibility (weaker CSR is available up to 250% FPL). For someone earning $23,000, the benchmark second-cheapest silver plan costs $121 per month.
In some regions the cheapest silver plan is considerably less, though, and bronze plan prices vary widely. In a prior post, I demonstrated that in California regions where the price difference between cheapest silver and cheapest bronze was smallest, silver plan selection was highest. In parts of LA County where the spread was just $20 for a 40 year-old earning $23,000, 70.5% of enrollees bought silver and 18.3% bought bronze. In the Eastern Counties, where the spread was generally over $100, just 41.5% bought silver and 55.8% bought bronze.
In 2016, bronze-silver spreads have widened, at least in the 12 of 19 pricing regions I spotlighted earlier. In some regions silver "discounts" narrowed, because the cheapest silver plan is closer to the benchmark; in others, cheaper bronze plans are on offer in 2016 than in 2015; and in some, both changes have taken place (in some regions, too, one change or the other is in the opposite direction).