Showing posts with label Section 1332 waivers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Section 1332 waivers. Show all posts

Thursday, August 10, 2017

Compromise maybe a little? Urban Institute's Blumberg and Holahan on what's next for the ACA

In August 2015, Urban Institute healthcare scholars Linda Blumberg and John Holahan acknowledged that ACA marketplace subsidies were too skimpy to do all they were intended to and came up with a comprehensive proposal to enrich them.  In January 2016, staring down the barrel of Republican repeal vows, they remixed those improvements in a compromise package that included several concessions to conservative priorities. These included:
  • Repeal the employer mandate (requiring employers with more than 50 employees to offer insurance or pay a penalty)
  • Repeal and replace the individual mandate  (with a premium penalty for those who did not maintain continuous coverage)
  • Examine the Essential Health Benefits and look for responsible ways to lighten them
  • Allow states to drop the income threshold for Medicaid eligibility to 100% of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL). At present, the threshold is 138% FPL in states that have accepted the ACA Medicaid expansion. 
As I noted recently, these concessions were embedded with offsets: reinsurance to mitigate the premium hikes likely to be triggered by individual mandate replacement, and lower out-of-pocket costs to cushion the substitution for enrollees in the 100-138% FPL range of private insurance for Medicaid (richer subsidies across all income levels would also offset the ill effects of a weaker mandate substitute).

Sunday, March 01, 2015

Republican can do what they will to American healthcare -- by accepting the Affordable Care Act

Ask Republicans how they will reform the health insurance market if they succeed in repealing the Affordable Care Act and you will not get a substantive "replace" plan. You will, however, hear three desiderata: 1) give states more control of their insurance markets; 2) give insurers more freedom to design plans outside ACA-imposed constraints; and 3) give consumers in the individual insurance market more choice (though the ACA marketplace shelves in most regions at present are not what you would call bare).

If Republicans were sincere about changing the market in this direction, they would have enormous leverage to do so, both by working within the ACA's essentially federalist (or "state-deferential") structure and by negotiating changes to the law that Democrats would surely accept in exchange for an end to dead-end opposition.

Let's count the ways that Republicans in state government and Congress could shape the health insurance markets to their liking, starting with the tamest and moving toward the most aggressive.