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Back in early March, looking at Covered California's enrollment breakouts before CMS released detailed marketplace enrollment data for all states, I expressed some disappointment that the enhanced subsidies provided by the American Rescue Plan Act did not have a stronger impact on silver plan selection at low incomes.
Under ARPA, the two cheapest silver plans in any rating area are free at incomes up to 150% FPL. At incomes up to 150% FPL, Cost Sharing Reduction (CSR), available only with silver plans, reduces the silver plan single-person medical deductible to $75 in California's standardized plans, compared to $6,300 for ordinary bronze plans (with a $500 drug deductible) and $7,000 for HDHP bronze. The out-of-pocket maximum for silver plans at this income level is $800, versus $8,200 for bronze and $7,000 for HDHP bronze. Silver benefits at this income level. are also superior to gold plans (OOP max $8,200) and platinum plans (OOP max $4,500).
In Open Enrollment 2022, 10% of California enrollees* in the 138-150% FPL category chose metal levels other than silver. While that may seem like a modest percentage, it's not when you consider the extent to which CSR at this income level increases silver plan value beyond that of plans offered at any other metal level, including platinum. In California in 2022, silver selection at this income level was three percentage points higher than in 2021 and just one percentage point higher than in 2020.
The lack of a strong increase in silver plan selection when silver plans were available free is all the more surprising in light of a fact I didn't know when I wrote the prior post. In advance of Open Enrollment for 2022, Covered California, the state exchange, implemented a new policy, enabled by the ARPA subsidy boosts, whereby
Bronze enrollees eligible for the highest level of cost-sharing subsidies are autorenewed in a silver plan — allowing them to access cost-sharing assistance — with the same insurer and provider network for a $0 premium, if available.