Christopher
Holt October 25, 2019
This week the Administrator for the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), Seema Verma, appeared before the House
Energy and Commerce (E&C) Committee to discuss — what else? — the
Affordable Care Act (ACA). The occasion was open enrollment beginning on
November 1 for 2020 plan-year insurance sold through the ACA’s insurance
exchanges. Once again, the law’s supporters and opponents are arguing about
that now age-old question: Is the Trump Administration gutting or saving
Obamacare?
If the question is straightforward, the
competing narratives from the left and right are not. Yes, ACA supporters want
to make the case that President Trump has been waging war on the ACA, seeking
to undercut it at every turn. But they still want to argue that, despite the
president’s efforts, the law is fundamentally sound—in need of improvement and
expansion, certainly, but in no way fatally flawed. The Trump Administration is
also making two somewhat divergent arguments. On the one hand, officials argue
that under the president’s stewardship, the market created by the law is
improving: Premiums are coming down and competition is increasing. On the other
hand, the president continues to rail against what he argues is a flawed law
and failing policy. So, what’s the reality?
Start by considering the data. In advance
of the E&C hearing, CMS released some details
on what the ACA market will look like in the 38 states that utilize the
federally facilitated marketplace. Premiums for the benchmark Silver plan will
decrease on average by 4 percent, compared to an average decrease last year of
1 percent. AAF’s analysis
of Silver benchmark premiums for all 50 states and the District of Columbia
found that premiums increased on average by just 1 percent in 2019, but premium
data for states not using the federally facilitated marketplace is not fully
available yet. Additionally, in those same 38 states the number of insurers
offering coverage has increased from 155 in 2019 to 175 in 2020, and the
average enrollee will be able to choose from 3 to 4 different insurers in 2020,
compared to 2 to 3 in 2019. In 2020 only 12 percent of enrollees will have
access to only 1 insurer, down from 20 percent in 2019.
In other words, the data on the whole indicate
that competition is increasing and premiums have decreased for the second
straight year. Prior to 2019, double-digit premium increases were the norm. Of
course, averages mask variation: In Delaware benchmark premiums will decrease
by 20 percent, while enrollees in Indiana will see a 13 percent increase.
Still, it is clear that the Trump Administration has overseen a period of
stabilization and even slight improvement in the ACA marketplace.
At the same time, the administration has taken actions
to create an individual marketplace in line with the president’s policy
objectives of choice and competition, promoting short-term limited-duration
insurance plans (STLDIs), expanding access to association health plans, and
ending cost-sharing
reduction (CSR) payments to insurers. Some of these policies—such as
ending CSR payments—have had dramatic negative impacts on premiums, but most of
the administration’s policies aimed at expanding choice and offering lower cost
options have had minimal effect on the health of the marketplace either way.
Supporters of the ACA may oppose STLDIs on principle, but the argument that
they’ve hurt the individual market or undermined the ACA falls flat so far.
Still, there is also the question of whether the
Trump Administration’s actions are aimed at undercutting the ACA. Again,
signals are mixed here. The Justice Department’s decision
not to defend the law clearly aims at its complete dismantling, and the
president himself still openly supports repeal. It is inarguable that the Trump
Administration is seeking to overturn the ACA. That said, the data indicate
that CMS’s management of the individual market under President Trump has been
effective and has not had a detrimental impact on the marketplace (with the
exception of the CSR decision). Both sides care about improving the individual
market. The fight is about who gets credit.
https://www.americanactionforum.org/weekly-checkup/parsing-the-competing-narratives-on-the-affordable-care-act/#ixzz63fOhFG62
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