Priced Out

Evidence Shows ACA鈥檚 Mandated Benefits Alone Don鈥檛 Drive Up Costs. The Debate Continues.

The healthcare.gov website seen on a laptop. The webpage reads, "Welcome to the Health Insurance Marketplace. Apply for coverage."
(Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

In January, when President Donald Trump unveiled his one-page outline to address health care spending, dubbed 鈥,鈥 he specifically mentioned the Affordable Care Act鈥檚 role in driving up costs.

鈥淚 call it the unaffordable care act,鈥 he said. He reprised the line in his address, blaming 鈥渢he crushing cost of health care鈥 on Obamacare.

Trump鈥檚 words also play off an ongoing congressional debate that began late last year with the expiration of the enhanced tax subsidies that had lowered the cost of ACA insurance for millions of Americans 鈥 and thrust the issue of ACA-related costs back to center stage.

Without those enhanced subsidies, the amount people pay toward monthly Obamacare premiums doubled, on average. The number of people enrolled in ACA coverage for this year has dropped by more than a million, and experts say more people could abandon coverage once premiums come due. Democrats are using this development to crank up the heat on Republicans ahead of the November elections and steer the conversation on the affordability issue.

Republicans fault the law itself for driving up these costs. For instance, Rep. Mike Lawler (R-N.Y.) that premiums 鈥渟kyrocketed across the country since it took effect.”

Critics routinely point to several provisions within the ACA as the culprits 鈥 among them, essential health benefits, or EHBs. Under the law, Obamacare plans must cover certain essential services, including emergency care, hospitalization, maternity, and prescription drugs, without annual or lifetime dollar limits. But connecting EHBs to the premium increases felt by consumers is not straightforward.

Here鈥檚 a primer on key issues involved.

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Checking the Numbers

It鈥檚 clear that Obamacare premiums have increased.

An analysis by the right-leaning Paragon Health Institute shows that the average premium for a 50-year-old with Obamacare since 2014. The average premium for employer-based plans grew 68% during that same time.

Paragon鈥檚 president, , told 麻豆女优 Health News that this shows the ACA has made health care on the individual market more expensive.

Still, the comparison overlooks a couple of points. Pre-ACA, employer plans generally offered more generous coverage than individual market plans, so work-based coverage cost more. And individual plans were cheaper in part because they could bar applicants with health problems. Beginning in 2014, the ACA forced individual policies to look more like employer plans, covering a broader range of benefits and accepting both healthy and unhealthy applicants. As a result, premiums rose that first year. In the years that followed, ACA plans often experienced faster growth in premiums than job-based plans. Some policy analysts say this isn鈥檛 surprising because ACA plans started at a lower dollar base and had more room to rise.

States that saw less dramatic post-ACA premium increases, such as Massachusetts and New York, already mandated that individual-market plans provide EHB-like coverage, noted , a senior research fellow at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank. These states also had higher premiums due to that and other provisions, such as not allowing plans to exclude people with preexisting conditions.

“It was a combination of things,” he said.

Blase acknowledges that the two types of insurance started at different price points. But he said the percentage change over time shows that the ACA faces 鈥渦nderlying inflationary pressures鈥 鈥 including the now-expired, more generous, covid pandemic-era subsidies 鈥 that affect its policyholders more so than employer plans.

Aside from that point, however, were on the rise even before the ACA took effect.

An analysis by Jonathan Gruber at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology found that between 2008 and 2010, premiums grew by at least 10% a year and were highly variable across states and insurers.

Consumers鈥 Other Costs

Over time, ACA deductibles 鈥 the amounts policyholders must satisfy in a given year before insurance kicks in 鈥 have seen large increases, with 鈥渂ronze鈥 plans now averaging $7,476 annually, up from $5,113 in 2014, according to 麻豆女优, a health information nonprofit that includes 麻豆女优 Health News. Bronze plans tend to have lower premiums than the other metal-level categories 鈥 “silver,” “gold,” and “platinum” 鈥 in part because of their higher deductibles.

The Trump administration is doubling down on high-deductible plans as part of its emphasis on affordability, making it easier this year for people age 30 and up to qualify for what are called 鈥渃atastrophic plans.鈥 These come with even larger deductibles than bronze plans.

The administration to cement those changes, saying it was designed to lower premiums and expand choices. It would raise next year鈥檚 deductibles for catastrophic plans to $15,600 a year for an individual or around $30,000 for a family. It isn鈥檛 clear how popular such plans would be. Detailed enrollment figures for this year are not yet available, but estimates indicate chose catastrophic plans in 2025, and consumers can鈥檛 use federal subsidies to purchase them.

Before this Trump proposal, though, recent data showed that the rising rate of ACA plan deductibles had not outpaced deductibles for employer plans.

The weighted average 鈥 a calculation that gives more weight to ACA plans with the most people enrolled 鈥 shows in annual deductible amounts since 2014, from $1,881 to $2,912. During that same period, deductibles in plans offered by 59%, from $1,186 to $1,886, according to 麻豆女优鈥檚 annual employer survey.

Essential What?

To be clear, the ACA鈥檚 catastrophic and bronze plans must cover essential health benefits, as do all Obamacare plans. These EHBs fall into 10 categories of medical services and were included in the ACA to ensure individual policies meet a minimum standard of coverage and are comparable to employer-based health insurance.

Preventive services, such as annual checkups, vaccines, and certain cancer screenings, must be covered at no additional cost to patients. All plans must completely cover the cost of specific vaccines, including the annual flu shot. And insurers cannot refuse to pay for emergency care provided at an out-of-network hospital. Other EHBs are subject to out-of-pocket costs, such as copays at the doctor鈥檚 office or pharmacy counter.

In some ways, EHBs save money because they鈥檝e increased access to preventive care, said , a professor of health policy and management at Johns Hopkins University鈥檚 Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Services such as cancer screenings and lab tests can lead to earlier detection of serious conditions, when treatment is less costly, and positive outcomes are more likely.

鈥淚f you look down the list of essential health benefits, I think most people would reach the judgment that those are health care services that people should have access to,鈥 said Larry Levitt, 麻豆女优鈥檚 executive vice president for health policy.

Joseph Antos, a senior fellow emeritus at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, said ACA requirements 鈥 such as requiring insurers to accept anyone, regardless of their health status, and limiting insurers鈥 ability to charge older people more for coverage 鈥 also have played roles in boosting premiums.

鈥淩eally, it鈥檚 practically impossible to tease any one thing out,鈥 Antos said.

States do have latitude to add benefits that fall under the EHB umbrella. For example, bariatric surgery is covered as an EHB in , but not in . Pennsylvania鈥檚 EHBs also don鈥檛 include hearing aids, but do.

But the Trump administration鈥檚 2027 regulatory proposal : When 鈥渟tates enact benefit mandates, plan premiums must generally increase to account for the additional coverage,鈥 it reads. It also signals that added benefits can raise consumer costs and proposes that states be required to use their own funds to offset some of those costs.

Paragon鈥檚 Blase echoed this take in his bottom line. Mandating that plans cover EHBs without annual or lifetime caps, as required under the ACA law, encourages clinicians to overbill and overprescribe, he said. That drives up premiums and means a bigger check for insurers and medical providers at the expense of taxpayers. 鈥淵ou just turn patients into money factories,鈥 he said.

, a senior research fellow at Georgetown University鈥檚 Center on Health Insurance Reforms, disagrees, saying that whatever EHBs鈥 role, they aren鈥檛 to blame for the year-over-year premium hikes.

People aren鈥檛 consuming medical care at exponential rates just because certain services are now covered: 鈥淢e not paying anything for that colonoscopy doesn鈥檛 make me want to get more of them,鈥 she said.

Are you struggling to afford your health insurance? Have you decided to forgo coverage?  to contact 麻豆女优 Health News and share your story.

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