Stateline.org
April 9, 2018
April 09--Apr. 9--A couple of years ago, the health
insurance exchange in Minnesota -- MNsure -- was in deep trouble.
Health insurance premiums for individual policies had shot up by as much as 67
percent, among the steepest increases in the country. Insurers were abandoning
the market, leaving 116,000 Minnesotans with scant choices.
The Minnesota Legislature offered a solution:
a $271 million, publicly funded reinsurance pool that would help health
insurance companies pay the most expensive medical claims, thereby lowering
overall insurance premiums. The hope was that backstopping the insurers would
stabilize the market and halt the rocket-like rise in premiums.
So far, so very good. In its first year, the reinsurance
pool has performed even better than expected. According to the Urban
Institute, 2018 premiums offered on MNsure not only didn't increase, they fell
by 15 percent.
Minnesota's peers are paying attention. The Gopher
State is one of four states trying to calm roiling health insurance markets by
creating state reinsurance pools -- even as actions by Congress and
the Trump administration continue to create uncertainty in the health insurance
industry.
Maryland became the latest to do so when Republican
Gov. Larry Hogan last week signed a bill creating a reinsurance pool
financed in part in the next year by a $380 million tax on health
insurers. Another six states are taking steps to launch their own reinsurance
programs.
Reinsurance has long had a place in the private insurance
market.
Essentially, it entails insurance companies taking out
their own insurance to protect themselves when they are hit by an unexpectedly
high claim, "like when somebody needs a heart transplant or a liver
transplant or something else where costs are over, say, $100,000," said Brad
Herring, a health economist at the Bloomberg School of Public
Health at Johns Hopkins University.
A public health reinsurance plan works the same way,
except the state reimburses insurers for claims that climb above a certain set
figure, depending on the plan.
In Minnesota's reinsurance program, health
insurers are eligible for reimbursements from the state for claims
between $50,000 and $250,000. The insurers are responsible for
amounts over $250,000.
Annette O'Toole, MNsure's chief executive officer,
said Minnesota acted in response to soaring premium increases and the
departure of insurers such as Blue Cross and Blue Shield, the largest
seller of individual policies in Minnesota at the time. No insurers
have left the Minnesota market since the reinsurance pool launched.
"We were taking it on the chin. We were really in
crisis," O'Toole said. "This has provided immediate and positive
results."
Alaska, which created a reinsurance pool in 2016, also saw
a year-to-year decrease in premiums. A third state, Oregon, authorized the
creation of a reinsurance program last fall, but that action came after the
premiums had already been set for 2018.
But the fix in Minnesota is temporary. The
Legislature ponied up about quarter of a billion dollars for two years,
with a roughly equivalent amount expected to come from the federal government.
But, O'Toole says, that state support won't last.
"Minnesota had a significant budget reserve a
year ago, so we had money for it," O'Toole said. "We won't have that
going forward."
That is why O'Toole and many other state officials want
the federal government to help fill state reinsurance pools.
Health policy analysts say the situation has only grown
more pressing in recent months.
In December, Congress eliminated the so-called
individual mandate as part of the new tax law, meaning that healthy people --
who would pay premiums but be unlikely to need expensive care -- can now opt
out of insurance. And the Trump administration scrapped federal subsidies that
were worth about $7 billion a year to insurance companies. Analysts
say those actions are likely to lead to higher premiums for those remaining on
the individual market and increased financial pressure on insurers.
There were two bipartisan bills in the Senate --
one cosponsored by Republican Susan Collins of Maine and
Democrat Bill Nelson of Florida, and the other by
Republican Lamar Alexander of Tennessee and
Democrat Patty Murray of Washington -- that would have
sent $5 billion a year to the states to finance their reinsurance
pools. But neither was incorporated into the spending bill that Trump signed
last month.
Avalere, a health policy research firm, estimated that the
measure pushed by Collins and Nelson would have reduced 2019 premiums by 4
percent and increased enrollment in Affordable Care Act plans by 180,000. Not
surprisingly, the bill had the strong support of the health insurance industry.
Although the Senate bills had considerable
bipartisan support, there was significant opposition too. "This bailout
approach is wrong and should be abandoned," a report published last month
by the conservative Heritage Foundation said. "It is fiscally
imprudent and unnecessary." It is the ACA's "radical regulatory
overreach," that has caused chaos in the health insurance market, the
report says.
At the same time, many left-leaning analysts say public
reinsurance is yet another cumbersome solution to a fractured health care
system that should be replaced by a single-payer model.
The Affordable Care Act set up a federal reinsurance pool
to compensate insurers for taking on high-risk beneficiaries (who, under ACA
provisions, could not be charged higher premiums than anyone else). The law set
aside $20 billion, funded largely by a tax on insurers, for the years 2014
through 2016. After that, the pool disappeared, and the determination of
congressional Republicans to repeal the ACA made renewal of the
program a political impossibility.
States that want to establish their own reinsurance pools
with some federal money must apply for a waiver from the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services to depart from some provisions of the ACA
while still providing comprehensive, affordable health coverage.
In their applications to create reinsurance pools, states
have argued that by reducing premiums, they will save the federal government
money because it will have to pay less in tax credits for low-income
policyholders.
Alaska created its reinsurance pool with $55
million from a tax on insurers, but it subsequently applied for and
received a federal waiver, which is expected to bring in about $58
million in federal money. The state is hoping that because its individual
insurance market is so small -- about 23,000 people -- the federal contribution
will negate the need for it to put state money into the pool.
Oregon has committed $1.1 billion in state
money, also raised through a tax on insurers, over 10 years and is hoping to
receive $356 million in federal money during that period.
In February Wisconsin enacted a $200 million law
that, should the federal government grant a waiver, will funnel $30
million to $50 million in state money into a reinsurance pool
with the federal government picking up the
rest. Democrats joined Republicans in favor of the bill in
both houses. The main opposition came from the progressive group, Citizen
Action of Wisconsin, which called the reinsurance plan a bailout for
insurance companies.
In Colorado, an early analysis projected that if the
state had spent $177 millionto create a reinsurance pool in 2018 and
received $119 million in federal money, premiums would have declined
by 21 percent. Colorado lawmakers are working on a reinsurance pool
proposal.
But some financially strapped states simply don't have the
money to set up reinsurance pools. In 2018, Minnesota's pool will
total $271 million: $140 million in state money
and $131 million in federal dollars. Minnesota had to
provide all the money upfront, and the federal government will pay its share
during the course of the year
Not all states can afford to do that, said Sarah
Lueck, a senior policy analyst with the Center for Budget and Policy
Priorities, a nonpartisan research and policy institute in Washington.
___
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