Research: Within 10 years, the number of uninsured Americans may increase by 10%

Loading

National Journal:

The Affordable Care Act cannot be broken down into sound bites. This holds true for both its most ardent supporters and its most fervent opponents. The law is simply too complex to be labeled either a total failure or a smashing success.

But that doesn’t mean it isn’t trending in one of those two directions. Across the country, individuals and families are beginning to learn whether their insurance premiums will change for 2015—early estimates indicate an overall national increase of 7.5 percent, according to a PricewaterhouseCoopers analysis. That’s what is expected despite the early promise that the ACA would lower overall premiums by as much as $2,500 per family.

These hikes, which add to those experienced by many consumers last year, are likely just the tip of the iceberg. In recent months, I have worked with Dr. Stephen Parente, a professor of Health Finance at the University of Minnesota, to assess how the Affordable Care Act will affect Americans’ access to health care over the next decade.

Our findings don’t bode well for the law’s long-term success.

We estimate that within 10 years, the number of uninsured Americans may increase by 10 percent. At the same time, premiums will rise faster than federal subsidies. The latter problem will be most severe when insurers release their 2017 rate increases in the summer and fall of 2016—perhaps the most awkward timing for the law’s supporters.

We reached this conclusion using the 2014 enrollment numbers, which the Health and Human Services Department announced in April. We analyzed them using a consumer simulation model funded in part by HHS. The model uses the regulatory requirements mandated by the ACA to estimate the cause-and-effect relationship between health care plan pricing and consumers’ buying habits.

The law will play out in two phases. The first will take place between now and 2016. During that time, the price of health care plans will increase. We already saw this happen last year and will likely see the same again this summer and fall. Another event will also likely repeat itself. This is one the law’s opponents may prefer to ignore. The number of uninsured will decrease as people sign up for Medicaid or the Affordable Care Act’s health exchanges.

But this trend will come to a sudden end in 2017. That year, health insurance companies will lose their ability to artificially depress health care costs using taxpayer money. (Two ACA provisions, both of which expire in 2017, currently let insurers tap federal taxpayer funds for various reasons.)

This will send shock waves through the health care world.

We estimate that average annual costs for the cheapest individual plans—the “bronze” plans—may increase by 96 percent, from roughly $2,100 to nearly $4,200. Bronze family plans prices, meanwhile, may increase by nearly 50 percent. The average plan in this category could come close to $13,000 a year in total premiums. Almost every plan will see a price increase of some kind.

Read more

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
4 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

I have skin cancer and use a certain medication. With my insurance and a manufacturer coupon the price is $25.00. Today I had to refill it. The amount was $130.00. Without my insurance and the manufacturer coupon the medication is a little shy of $400.00. I told the pharmacist to keep it. Thank you obamacare. Thank you democrats who voted for this. 100% of the democrats voted yes . 0% republicans voted yes. Can’t wait until November.

Over the next ten years expect these headlines over and over and over again:

Here’s What’s Going On With Obamacare Premium Increases
Huffington Post-Aug 21, 2014
Take Florida, where the anti-Obamacare administration of Gov. Rick Scott (R) says health insurance premiums will go up 13.2 percent on …

Obamacare rates are rising once again
Washington Examiner-Aug 21, 2014

Arizona’s Obamacare health plan premiums expected to rise
Phoenix Business Journal-Aug 22, 2014
Report: Arizona’s ACA plans to hike rates 11 percent

California’s Obamacare rates to rise average 4.2 percent
CNBC-Aug 1, 2014

Solving a 2014 Obamacare problem pushes premium hikes in 2015
Politico-Aug 13, 2014
The average increase is 7.5 percent, calculates PwC. … of many factors that go into premiums, the most important being the trajectory of health …

Obamacare premiums in Ohio
Columbus Dispatch-Aug 7, 2014
Average premiums for 2015 coverage will go up 12 percent for individuals and small businesses, under rates approved by the Ohio….
Obamacare premiums mask the real cost of Affordable Care Act …
The Plain Dealer – cleveland.com-Aug 13, 2014
You may have read that Ohio’s insurance department declared that premiums on the Affordable Care Act marketplace will go up by 12 percent …

Montana 2015 health-insurance policies on Obamacare exchanges won’t …
Billings Gazette-Aug 27, 2014
The 2015 policies don’t go on sale until Nov. 15. “The face value of the premium isn’t everything; there’s a lot more that goes … while prices for some of its silver and gold plans went up anywhere from 9 percent to 14 percent.

.
.
.
.
.

O-care did not solve what needed to be solved: how to insure those without insurance. Instead, a one-size-fits-all solution that makes absolutely no sense was enacted. No options to customize coverage. Outlaw direct payers, those who have, or don’t have, HSAs to pay their doctors.

My wife, who’s an MD, has seen her paperwork increase substantially this year, and expects it to grow at an exponential rate. Many of her colleagues are opting to take early retirement or move into concierge practice.

Plain and simple, O-care has destroyed health insurance. The insurance companies themselves will recognize that when the federal spigot is turned off in 2017.

And it only costs $2 trillion!