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As Policymakers Debate
Medicare-for-All, Analysis Finds the Medicare Advantage, Individual and Group
Health Insurance Markets Appear to Be Profitable, Especially Medicare
Advantage
Three key private health insurance markets --
Medicare Advantage, the individual market and the fully-insured group market
-- appear to be financially healthy and attractive to insurers, according to
a new KFF analysis.
The private Medicare Advantage market generates
significantly larger gross margins per person than the individual market or
fully-insured market, the analysis finds. The future of these markets has
become a focus for policymakers amid the debate over Medicare-for-all. Some
proposals would essentially eliminate private health insurance, while others
would retain a role for it but create a new public program to promote
affordability and expanded coverage. Some of these proposals would allow
insurers to contract with the federal government’s public option to provide
coverage, modeled on the Medicare Advantage program, in which plans are paid
by the federal government.
The analysis finds that private insurers achieved
annual gross margins of $1,608 per person in Medicare Advantage, on average,
between 2016 and 2018, about double the average gross margins in the
individual market ($779) and group market ($855). The Affordable Care Act
(ACA)-compliant individual market was marked by volatility in the early years
of the exchanges, with insurers initially setting premiums too low before the
market stabilized and insurers returned to pre-ACA profitability levels in
2018 following substantial premium increases.
When aggregated across all plans in this analysis
for 2016 to 2018, total gross margins averaged $23.9 billion per year for the
Medicare Advantage market, $26.5 billion per year for the fully-insured group
market and $10.6 billion per year for the much smaller individual market.
Medical loss ratios - medical expenses paid by
insurers as a share of the total premiums collected – are similar across all
three markets. But gross margins are much higher for Medicare Advantage
insurers because both medical expenses and premiums paid to Medicare
Advantage plans are substantially higher, since Medicare enrollees tend to
use more health care than people in the individual and group markets.
Medicare Advantage plans cover 22 million
beneficiaries. Plans purchased by individuals and families in the individual
market, including the ACA marketplaces in which subsidies are available to
some, cover roughly 15 million people. The fully insured group market for
employers and their employees, which gets tax-preferred treatment, serves
over 30 million people (though most workers are covered through self-insured
employer plans).
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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Tuesday, August 6, 2019
As Policymakers Debate Medicare-for-All, Analysis Finds the Medicare Advantage, Individual and Group Health Insurance Markets Appear to Be Profitable, Especially Medicare Advantage
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