As I noted last week, Tom Price's 2015 ACA repeal-and-replace bill, dubbed the Empower Patients First Act, is a grossly inadequate offering for the 20-plus million mostly poor and near-poor people who have so far gained health insurance through the Affordable Care Act. Its limited premium subsidies for shoppers in the individual market, adjusted for age but not income, would leave coverage unaffordable for most of the 9 million subsidized enrollees in the ACA marketplace. Worse, by repealing the ACA's Medicaid expansion, it would un-insure virtually all of the roughly 12 million who have gained coverage through the ACA's expansion of eligibility.
Price's EPFA does, however, provide significant aid to those who earn too much to qualify for ACA marketplace credits -- which includes some younger buyers with incomes as low as 250% FPL and a considerable number in the 300-400% FPL range. Insurance seekers who are subsidy-ineligible (or close to it) but not wealthy fare worst under the ACA, as the Urban Institute's Linda Blumberg and John Holahan have highlighted:
Price's subsidies would cover, on average, about 40% of the premium for the average benchmark silver plan offered in the ACA marketplace, and a higher percentage of the premium for the skimpier plans that would be on offer in the deregulated individual market his replacement bill would create. Coupled with an HSA, and possibly with full tax deductibility for any plan purchased in the individual market (as Trump's campaign website proposed), and with continuous coverage protection, it's a program that could work for the modestly affluent (at least, with some compromise preserving essential health benefits as a broad outline while giving states more autonomy to flesh them out).
Price's EPFA does, however, provide significant aid to those who earn too much to qualify for ACA marketplace credits -- which includes some younger buyers with incomes as low as 250% FPL and a considerable number in the 300-400% FPL range. Insurance seekers who are subsidy-ineligible (or close to it) but not wealthy fare worst under the ACA, as the Urban Institute's Linda Blumberg and John Holahan have highlighted:
Price's subsidies would cover, on average, about 40% of the premium for the average benchmark silver plan offered in the ACA marketplace, and a higher percentage of the premium for the skimpier plans that would be on offer in the deregulated individual market his replacement bill would create. Coupled with an HSA, and possibly with full tax deductibility for any plan purchased in the individual market (as Trump's campaign website proposed), and with continuous coverage protection, it's a program that could work for the modestly affluent (at least, with some compromise preserving essential health benefits as a broad outline while giving states more autonomy to flesh them out).