Eakinomics:
ObamaCare and the States
The Affordable Care Act (ACA, aka ObamaCare) is hardly the center of
public debate these days. But forgotten does not mean gone, and it turns
out it does not mean unchanging. Recall that ObamaCare was very much a
one-size-fits-all, top-down approach to insurance — in effect, a risky
policy bet on a particular approach. At the time of its passage, Oregon
senator Ron Wyden insisted on the inclusion of a process by which states
could apply for a waiver of the ACA requirements (known as a 1332 Waiver) to allow states to
offer innovative ways to meet ObamaCare’s goals. In particular, the
waivers had to satisfy some key requirements:
- States
would get the same amount of federal dollars as without the waiver,
but not more — it had to be budget neutral for the federal
government;
- The
plans must provide coverage that is at least as comprehensive;
- The
plans must provide coverage that is at least as affordable; and
- The
plans must provide coverage to a comparable number of residents.
In
practice, the Obama Administration interpreted these directives so
tightly — the budget dollars had to be the same every year; the coverage
had to be the same not just for the total, but for a variety of target
population subgroups; etc. — that the only way to match ObamaCare
offerings was effectively ObamaCare offerings. There was little appetite
for the 1332 waivers, which prompted lots of discussions of legislative reforms that went
nowhere due to partisan gridlock.
As detailed by Tara O’Neill Hayes,
this week the Trump Administration issued new regulatory guidance for 1332
waivers to replace the rigid Obama-era interpretation. In particular, it
requires no increase in the federal deficit over the
5-year waiver period and 10-year budget window — but not year
by year. In addition, CMS may approve a plan that could reduce the
number of people covered in one year if the number covered in the
long-term is not lower. The administration will also require
only some form of coverage, and that coverage may include newly
available types of coverage, such as a short-term limited duration plan or
an association health plan. Finally, as
Hayes explains, “provisions regarding comprehensiveness and affordability
will be considered concurrently: Coverage options under the waiver must
include plans that are both as comprehensive and affordable as without
the waiver (as opposed to allowing a state to offer some plans that are
comprehensive but not affordable and vice versa). That said, these
requirements may be considered met if such plans
are available to a comparable number of people as without the
waiver, regardless of the number of people expected to enroll in them;
the Trump Administration is referring to this as a new ‘access
standard.’”
The overall effect is to allow states to do things differently than the
federal standard — the original idea behind the waiver process.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, this move has already been advertised by the
left as giving the states carte blanche to assault those with pre-existing
conditions (and other vulnerable populations). The logic behind this is a
bit mystifying because states have just as much money as before,
there still have to be available plans that are as comprehensive and
affordable as without the waiver (and the only way for that to be
possible for those with expensive conditions is large subsidies for
comprehensive plans), and states face political pressure too. They
will be loath to devote their waiver effort to subsidizing so-called
“junk” insurance.
Even with the new guidance, the 1332 process is far from perfect. But
that is hardly surprising. The problem is that the ACA itself was deeply
flawed, and no regulation implementing it can cure those fundamental
ills.
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