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Individual Market Insurers Are
Expecting to Pay a Record $800 Million in Rebates to Consumers for Excessive
Premiums in 2018
Insurers Saw Their Best Annual Financial
Performance to Date Under the Affordable Care Act
Individual market insurers are expecting to return
to consumers a record total of about $800 million in excess premiums for
2018, a year in which the insurance companies posted their best annual
financial performance under the Affordable Care Act to date, finds a new KFF analysis.
The rebates to more than 3 million eligible
individual market consumers, based on preliminary estimates by insurers, must
be issued by September 30. They are the result of the insurance companies not
meeting the ACA’s medical loss ratio threshold, which requires insurers to
spend at least 80 percent of premium revenues on health care claims or
quality improvement activities.
On average, premiums per enrollee in the
individual market grew 26 percent from 2017 to 2018, to $559, while per person
claims grew only 7 percent, to $392. The analysis finds insurance companies
posted their strongest performance in the individual market under the ACA to
date, using two different financial indicators:
Financial results for
2018 suggest that insurers in the individual market are generally returning
to or exceeding profitability levels seen before 2014, when ACA insurance
market rules took effect, including the requirement to cover people with
pre-existing conditions.
Premium and claims data
from 2018 support the notion that premium increases in 2018 were in large
part compensating for uncertainty and policy changes such as the cessation of
cost sharing subsidy payments, with some insurers over-correcting and raising
premiums more than necessary to cover claims and administrative costs and
earn a reasonable profit, the analysis finds. Even though repeal of the
individual mandate penalty and the Trump administration’s push to expand
loosely regulated insurance options had an upward effect on 2019 premiums,
increases were mitigated by the prior year’s over-correction. On average,
premiums went down a bit in 2019.
The analysis is based on
insurer-reported financial data, including information from the National
Association of Insurance Commissioners, compiled and maintained by Mark
Farrah Associates.
Filling the need for trusted information on
national health issues, the Kaiser Family Foundation is a
nonprofit organization based in San Francisco, California.
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To be a Medicare Agent's source of information on topics affecting the agent and their business, and most importantly, their clientele, is the intention of this site. Sourced from various means rooted in the health insurance industry - insurance carriers, governmental agencies, and industry news agencies, this is aimed as a resource of varying viewpoints to spark critical thought and discussion. We welcome your contributions.
Wednesday, May 8, 2019
Individual Market Insurers Are Expecting to Pay a Record $800 Million in Rebates to Consumers for Excessive Premiums in 2018
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