By Julie Appleby July
5, 2017
If
Senate GOP leaders have their way, the check may not be in the mail.
Many
consumers collected unexpected rebates after the Affordable Care Act
became law, possibly with a note explaining why: Their insurer spent more of their
revenue from premiums on administration and profits than the law allowed, so it
was payback time.
More
than $2.4 billion has been returned to customers since the provision went into
effect in 2011, averaging about $138 per family in 2015.
Those
rebates could end under the Senate proposal — now on hold until after the July
Fourth holiday — to repeal the ACA.
Insurers
consider the requirement — known as the medical loss ratio (MLR) — onerous, and
some had to change the way they do business because of it. To be sure, the
rule didn’t resonate much with consumers, even if they received a rebate,
because the amounts were relatively small, possibly enough to cover a
family dinner out.
The
MLR has fans among policy experts, who say it pushes insurers to be more
efficient and creates a better value.
“When they struggle to pay premiums, when
they’re making those sacrifices, [consumers] want most of the value of those
premiums to go to actual medical care,” said Mila Kofman, a former insurance
commissioner in Maine, who now runs the D.C. Health Benefit Exchange Authority.
Like
much else related to the ACA, the provision was controversial from the start.
It states that insurers can spend no more than 15 percent of their customer
revenue on administration and profits when selling large group plans to
employers, or 20 percent for individual coverage. If plans exceed this mark,
they have to pay back the excess, either to employers or to people who bought
coverage from them on the individual market. Employers who got rebates for
their work-based plans could decide how to redistribute the money as long as it
was used to benefit employees.
The
Senate GOP health proposal, the Better Care Reconciliation Act,
would end that requirement in 2019 and let states decide whether to continue
such limits and rebates.
In
some ways, this change would be a gift to insurers.
The
provision, as is, “limits their profitability” and, along with other factors,
may have contributed to an exodus of plans from some markets, explained
Christopher Condeluci, of CC Law & Policy in Washington.
“By
allowing states to craft more flexible” rules, the Senate measure may make it
“easier for insurers to operate,” said Condeluci, who served as tax and
benefits counsel to the U.S. Senate Finance Committee when the ACA was being
drafted.
From
the start, insurers argued the one-size-fits-all rule was too strict and sought
the broadest possible definition of medical expenses. Supporters maintained it
could help slow premium increases or at least make them more in line with the
underlying growth of medical costs. This point is “really important,” said Tim
Jost, an emeritus law professor who studies the health care law and serves as a
consumer advocate before the National Association of Insurance Commissioners.
When
the ACA took effect, health care inflation had slowed, but “insurers were still
regularly raising premiums far above the actual growth in claims,” he said.
“They were making a huge profit.”
The
first year the provision was in effect, insurers paid more than $591 million in
rebates for policies covering more than 8.8 million customers, averaging $98
per family. Not all insurers exceeded the limit, and the amount of rebates
varied by insurer and state.
Over
time, the number of customers in plans that exceeded the limit fell but was
still nearly 5 million at last count.
The
reason: Insurers both trimmed administrative costs and, in some cases —
especially in the individual market — saw their spending on
sicker-than-expected customers rise, making it less likely they would exceed
limits. Indeed, some insurers were spending more than 90 percent of revenue on
medical costs by 2014, according to a report by the Urban Institute and the
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Some insurers have also reported losses on
their individual market coverage.
Before
the ACA, many states set rules on how much of their premium revenue insurers
must spend on medical care — although those rules often did not apply to
job-based insurance. The amounts varied, and they were often lower than what
the ACA requires. North Dakota, for example, required 55 percent of revenue be
spent on medical care, while New Jersey set the percentage at 80, according to
a 2010 issue brief in the
journal Health Affairs.
Like
many other aspects of the Senate bill, the impact on consumers would vary by
state.
The
Congressional Budget Office, in its review of the bill, predicted that about
half of people live in states that would maintain the current requirement.
Others would loosen it and allow a greater share of premium costs to go toward
administrative costs and profits. “In those states, in areas with little
competition among insurers, the provision would cause insurers to raise
premiums and would increase federal costs for subsidies through the
marketplaces,” noted the CBO. The analysis also said the provision would have
“little effect” on the number of people who have insurance.
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