Drew Altman, Kaiser Family
Foundation April 15, 2019
There
has been appropriate handwringing since 2010 about the affordability of
Affordable Care Act plans in the marketplaces. But new data show
that health insurance is decidedly less affordable for lower income people who
get coverage at work than for their counterparts with similar incomes in the marketplaces.
Why it
matters: It’s another example of how, when we focus so much on the ACA
markets, we lose sight of problems in the employer-based health system
where far more people get
their coverage. For lower-wage workers, their coverage is decidedly worse than
ACA coverage is.
The
details: A low-income family with a marketplace plan pays 8.4% of their
income on premiums and out-of-pocket costs, compared to 14% for a lower-wage
family with employer coverage (those with incomes below twice the poverty level).
- That's
based on Current
Population Survey data on what people at that income level paid for
employer coverage, plus exchange premium data collected from
Healthcare.gov and state-based ACA marketplaces.
How it
breaks down:
- For
low-income families with marketplace plans, the
out-of-pocket costs are 4.7% of their income, while the premiums are just
3.7% of their income.
- For those with
coverage through work, the out-of-pocket costs are 5% of
their income, roughly the same as the families with marketplace plans.
- The big
difference is in the premiums — because the low-income families
with workplace coverage pay about 9% of their income to cover those
payments.
The
largest share of group insurance premiums, paid by employers,
also depresses wages for lower-wage and other workers.
Between
the lines: It’s not really surprising that marketplace enrollees do better.
The ACA provides financial protections for lower-income people enrolled in
subsidized health plans in the marketplaces or in Medicaid, and there are no
similar income-based subsidies that apply to employer plans.
- In
fact, as employers shift more costs to employees, low
and moderate-income families face several thousand dollars in premium
contributions and cost sharing.
- For firms that
employ disproportionately
low-wage workers, it can simply be too expensive for employers to provide
good coverage. Premiums averaged
$6,896 for a single policy and $19,616 for a family plan in 2018.
We tend
to think of everyone with employer coverage as one big group, but it’s really
lower wage workers — and, while it’s a different subject, also people with
major illnesses — who take it on the chin in the current private health
insurance system. They are also the group with employer coverage who would
benefit the most from a Medicare-for-All style plan.
The
bottom line: Employer-based coverage is by far the largest source of health
insurance, and it now provides the least financial protection for lower income
workers who need it most. We debate affordability in the ACA marketplaces a
lot, but we don’t talk about this far larger problem much, if at all.
https://www.axios.com/employer-coverage-less-affordable-than-aca-low-income-1f1642a7-b211-497f-aec7-d3315c150266.html
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