{"id":4632,"date":"2018-05-21T09:49:38","date_gmt":"2018-05-21T13:49:38","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/chirblog.org\/?p=4632"},"modified":"2018-05-31T12:13:35","modified_gmt":"2018-05-31T16:13:35","slug":"what-early-rate-filings-tell-us-about-future-of-aca","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chirblog.org\/what-early-rate-filings-tell-us-about-future-of-aca\/","title":{"rendered":"The Effects of Federal Policy: What Early Premium Rate Filings Can Tell Us About the Future of the Affordable Care Act"},"content":{"rendered":"
Recent headlines<\/a> have raised alarms about hefty premium rate increases facing Affordable Care Act (ACA) consumers in 2019. Yet health insurers just had their most profitable<\/a> year in the Affordable Care Act\u2019s (ACA) health insurance marketplaces. Why the big price hikes from insurers? The answer may be found in the rate justifications that insurers are required to submit to state departments of insurance.<\/p>\n Although most states do not require insurers to submit 2019 proposed premium rates and their justifications until June, some set their deadlines in May, including Virginia<\/a>, Maryland<\/a>, Vermont<\/a> and Oregon<\/a>. In these states, proposed rate changes vary from a 9.58 percent decrease (PacificSource in Oregon) to a 91.4 percent increase (CareFirst of Maryland\u2019s Blue Preferred product). We dug into the actuarial memos submitted in these states to find out what\u2019s behind the premium changes.<\/p>\n In general, a common set of factors are driving premium rate changes this year. They include:<\/p>\n The impact of the above factors differs among insurers. For example, among our sample of filings from the above four states, projections of medical inflation ranged from 4 percent (Kaiser Health Plan in Oregon) to 9.5 percent (CareFirst in Maryland). Also, insurers\u2019 profit expectations ranged from a high of 8 percent (Optima in Virginia) to a low of 1.5 percent (Blue Cross Blue Shield of Vermont). However, there were common themes.<\/p>\n According to the rate filings, the number one factor pushing premiums up in 2019 is Congress\u2019 repeal of the individual mandate penalty in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act<\/a> of 2017. This is not unexpected. The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office projected<\/a> that repealing the mandate penalty would increase premiums by about 10 percent each year.<\/p>\n Therefore, it was not surprising that the insurers in our sample expect that the mandate repeal will reduce the size and increase the morbidity<\/a> of their membership. In Virginia, for example, Kaiser Foundation Health Plan\u2019s<\/a> requested rise of 32.1 percent is driven by an increase in the morbidity of their membership. \u201cThe primary cause,\u201d the company says, is \u201crelated to nonenforcement of the Individual Mandate.\u201d Similarly, BridgeSpan<\/a> in Oregon estimates that the individual mandate repeal will fuel a 7.2 percent increase in morbidity.<\/p>\n Notably, although both of Vermont\u2019s insurers predicted that repeal of the individual mandate penalty would cause them to lose healthy enrollees, the projected premium impact was relatively modest, at 2.2 percent for Blue Cross Blue Shield<\/a> and 2 percent for MVP<\/a>. A key reason for this is that Vermont is one of only two states that have merged<\/a> their individual and small-group risk pools. The small-group market in Vermont is over half of the enrolled population, which materially reduces the impact of the mandate penalty repeal.<\/p>\n Insurers are also predicting that their risk pool will be smaller and sicker due to \u201cpotential movement into other markets.\u201d These markets include association health plans<\/a> (AHPs) and short-term, limited duration insurance<\/a>, both of which are exempt from many of the ACA\u2019s consumer protections and have been promoted by the Trump administration as cheaper coverage alternative.<\/p>\n For example, insurers such as Optima<\/a> and CareFirst<\/a> in Virginia note that the \u201cavailability of association health plans and expanded availability of short term medical plans\u201d was affecting their rate projections, with CareFirst adding a 10% premium load as a result. BlueCross BlueShield of Vermont<\/a> also forecasts that proposed alternatives to ACA-compliant options \u201ccould significantly disrupt the single risk pool,\u201d although they did not build that disruption into their proposed rate for 2019, perhaps because those policies are not yet finalized.<\/p>\n For Providence Health Plan<\/a> in Oregon, AHPs are a significant risk, with the company expressing concern that that the administration\u2019s proposed rule will \u201cresult in market segmentation and increased morbidity in ACA markets.\u201d The insurer is increasing premiums by 2.3 percent to reflect the added risk. Coupled with the repeal of the individual mandate, the insurer predicts an overall increase in morbidity of 10 percent. However, other insurers in Oregon, such as Regence Blue Cross Blue Shield<\/a>, Moda<\/a>, and Kaiser Permanente<\/a>, do not forecast that AHPs will have a significant impact on rates.<\/p>\n In addition to repealing the individual mandate penalty, Congress has suspended for 2019 the Health Insurer Tax (HIT), an annual fee imposed on insurers to help fund the ACA. Insurers in our sample estimate that waiving the HIT for 2019 will reduce premiums by 1-2 percent.<\/p>\n The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act reduced the corporate income tax rate from 35 percent to 21 percent, resulting in a big tax break<\/a> for insurance companies. Among our sample, only one insurer is clearly building that tax cut into its rate filing. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Vermont<\/a> was able to moderate rate increases by passing on to consumers \u201c100% of federal income tax savings\u201d from the tax bill. They estimate that this decision, combined with efforts to trim network and prescription drug costs, will reduce rates by 4.2 percent.<\/p>\n Federal rules<\/a> published in 2017 gave individual market insurers more flexibility over plan benefit design. In response, several companies in our sample have made changes to their benefit designs that reduced the upward pressure on premiums. For example, in both its Maryland<\/a> and Virginia<\/a> filings, CareFirst notes that increases in plan deductibles and higher annual out-of-pocket caps reduced their proposed premium increase.<\/p>\n Maryland\u2019s legislation<\/a> to limit the marketing of short-term health plans<\/a> has led insurers in that state to project better overall morbidity in the risk pool than would otherwise be the case. For example, CareFirst notes that they chose the \u201clow end\u201d of projected morbidity deterioration (5 percent instead of 10 percent) because the bill \u201cmitigated\u201d the risks of adverse selection in the market.<\/p>\n Oregon\u2019s reinsurance program<\/a> is keeping premium rate increases lower than they otherwise would be. For example, Providence Health Plan<\/a>, Moda<\/a>, Kaiser<\/a>, and PacificSource<\/a> all project reductions in claims expense as a result of the program. Also, none of the insurer filings reviewed in Oregon predict that the expansion of short-term plans will adversely impact rates, perhaps because Oregon recently limited<\/a> them to a 3-month duration.<\/p>\n The insurers all caveat that market changes could require them to adjust their rates or re-evaluate their market participation, which they have some leeway to do until marketplace contracts are signed September. For example, Anthem<\/a> in Virginia observes that if other insurers enter or exit the market it can \u201ccreate a need for reconsideration and revision of proposed premium rates.\u201d However, none of the insurers in our sample have announced plans at this juncture to reduce their market footprint. On the contrary, two in Oregon \u2013 PacificSource and Kaiser \u2013 intend to expand their service areas.<\/p>\n\n
Repeal of the Individual Mandate Penalty is Increasing Premiums<\/h2>\n
The Expansion of Short-term and Association Health Plans is Increasing Premiums<\/h2>\n
Factors Reducing Rate Increases<\/h2>\n
The Health Insurer Tax<\/h3>\n
Federal Income Tax Cuts<\/h3>\n
Less Generous Benefits<\/h3>\n
State Actions to Reduce Premiums<\/h3>\n
Proposed Rates are Preliminary \u2013 Public Policy and Market Dynamics Matter<\/h2>\n