Christopher Holt November 15, 2019
This week, AAF’s Center for Health and Economy
(H&E) released
modeling on the cost and coverage impacts of a Medicare buy-in
plan—specifically H.R. 1346, “The Medicare Buy-in and Health Care Stabilization
Act of 2019.” As discussed in last week’s Checkup, the popularity of Medicare for All (M4A)
is declining as its details get parsed in the Democratic presidential primary. Simultaneously,
other proposals for expanding coverage—albeit ones that have not been as
closely examined—have become much more popular. According to the Kaiser Family
Foundation, 77 percent of Americans have a favorable opinion of extending a
Medicare buy-in option to Americans aged 50 to 64.
But what would the reality of Medicare buy-in
look like? According to our modeling, the reality wouldn’t live up to the hype.
H.R. 1346, like most Medicare buy-in proposals,
is more of a public option/Medicare hybrid, and the bill does far more than
just create a new insurance option. H.R. 1346 makes a number of changes to the
Affordable Care Act (ACA) in addition to creating a “Medicare” plan that
Americans age 50 to 64 can purchase. The major ACA changes include establishing
a reinsurance program to protect insurers selling plans in the ACA marketplace
against especially high-cost patients, and restarting and increasing cost
sharing reduction (CSR) payments to marketplace insurers.
The buy-in plan itself would be sold in the
individual market; the enrollees would be charged a premium set at the average
annual per capita cost for benefits and administrative expenses under Medicare
Parts A, B, and D. Additionally, if an individual purchasing the buy-in plan is
eligible for premium tax credits or CSR payments through the ACA exchanges,
those benefits can be applied to the buy-in plan.
Altogether, H&E finds that the number of
people insured under the package of policies in H.R. 1346 would increase by
about 1 million initially, relative to H&E’s baseline, but that increase
would drop to less than 500,000 by 2029. Just under 300,000 people would
purchase the Medicare buy-in plan in the first year, and the number of buy-in
enrollees would decrease over time to less than 200,000 by 2029. Overall, H.R.
1346 would increase federal spending by $184 billion over 10 years. Of note,
H&E found that H.R. 1346 would lead to a decrease in premiums paid for
catastrophic, Bronze, Silver, and Platinum marketplace plans of between 4 and
12 percent. That drop in premiums, however, is most directly the result of the
reinsurance program, and not the Medicare buy-in plan. Additionally, premiums
for the Medicare buy-in plan are expected to grow faster then marketplace plans
of a similar actuarial value.
What do all of these figures mean? This Medicare
buy-in proposal would spend $186 billion over 10 years to reduce the uninsured
population ultimately by less than 500,000, or 0.2 percent, with the
introduction of the Medicare buy-in contributing little. To put it another way,
H&E projects that under current law about 29 million Americans will be
uninsured at some point in 2020, but under H.R. 1346, after spending $186
billion, the country will still have roughly 33 million Americans uninsured for
at least part of 2029.
Medicare buy-in is an increasingly attractive
policy option for politicians. After all, it doesn’t take away private
insurance, any impacts to the individual market would likely be positive, and
it can be framed as a choice. But what H&E’s modeling has found is that
Medicare buy-in would spend a lot of money to do very little. Medicare buy-in
is fools gold: It won’t do much to address the uninsured, but it will increase
federal spending.
https://www.americanactionforum.org/weekly-checkup/is-a-medicare-buy-in-plan-viable/#ixzz65eGn9qgI
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