Kevin Drum on the prospects of sharp increases in health insurance rates. ------------------------------------------------  Obamacare Rates May Be Going Up Significantly in 2016 -- Or Maybe Not                 Kevin Drum Feed | Mother Jones    by Kevin Drum
  The New York Times reports that insurers are asking for  significant rate increases for 2016:   Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans — market leaders in many states —  are seeking rate increases that average 23 percent in Illinois, 25  percent in North Carolina, 31 percent in Oklahoma, 36 percent in  Tennessee and 54 percent in Minnesota....The rate requests, from some of  the more popular health plans, suggest that insurance markets are still adjusting to shock waves set off by the Affordable Care Act.
   It is far from certain how many of the rate increases will hold up on review, or how much they might change.  But already the proposals, buttressed with reams of actuarial data, are  fueling fierce debate about the effectiveness of the health law.
   ....Insurers with decades of experience and brand-new plans underestimated claims costs. “Our enrollees generated 24 percent more claims than we thought they would when we set our 2014 rates,”  said Nathan T. Johns, the chief financial officer of Arches Health  Plan, which covers about one-fourth of the people who bought insurance  through the federal exchange in Utah. As a result, the company said, it  collected premiums of $39.7 million and had claims of $56.3 million in  2014. It has requested rate increases averaging 45 percent for 2016.
   The rate requests are the first to reflect a full year of  experience with the new insurance exchanges and federal standards that  require insurers to accept all applicants.    I'd continue to counsel caution until we get further into the  process. Big rate increase requests have been the opening bids from  insurance companies for years, and they usually get knocked down to  something much more reasonable by the time the regulatory process is  finished. It's also the case that if lots of young people have been  paying the tax penalty instead of getting insured, that might change as  the penalty goes up. It was $95 in 2014, went up to $325 this year, and  goes up to $695 in 2016. At some point, more and more of these folks are  going to decide that they really ought to get something for their money  instead of just paying a penalty to the IRS, and that will help broaden  the insurance pool.
   Still, the bottom line here is that credible evidence is growing that  we might see biggish rate increases in 2016. They won't be the monster  increases that Fox News will be hyping endlessly, but they might be  bigger than us liberal types expected. We'll know in a few months. |