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Friday, Mar 17 2017

Full Issue

The Problem With Trying To Cover Those 24M People: It Costs A Lot Of Money

And that creates a tricky political problem for Republicans. In other news on the American Health Care Act, insurers project that premiums could jump by as much as 20 percent in 2018, a look at health savings accounts, the Cadillac tax and more.

Efforts by Senate Republicans to reduce the number of Americans who would lose coverage under the GOP healthcare reform bill face some stark political arithmetic: Restoring coverage for many or most of the 24 million people projected to lose it would cost lots of money conservatives don't want to spend.聽On top of that, a higher price tag for the bill could jeopardize its ability to meet the Senate's strict budget reconciliation rules, through which Republicans hope to avoid a Democratic filibuster and pass the bill on a strictly party-line vote. Bills passed through reconciliation cannot raise the federal deficit more than 10 years out. (Meyer, 3/16)

Republicans seeking to overhaul the Affordable Care Act face growing signs that there could be big increases in premiums for individual plans next year, which poses a challenge as the lawmakers try to rally support for the replacement legislation. According to a nonpartisan report released by the Congressional Budget Office on Monday, the House Republicans鈥 bill, known as the American Health Care Act, could raise premiums by 15% to 20% for individual plans in 2018, compared with rates without the bill. (Wilde Mathews, 3/16)

The House GOP鈥檚 Obamacare repeal bill would dramatically expand health savings accounts, the tax shelter created in a 2003 law that established a new Medicare drug benefit. But the expansion Republicans now envision 鈥 lifting the annual maximum family contribution from $6,750 currently to $13,100 鈥 would benefit very few people. A 2016 study by the Employee Benefit Research Institute, a trade group of major companies that offer benefits to their workers, found that in 2015 only 45 percent of people who had a health savings account contributed to it, though some of their employers put in money for them. The group estimated that 20-22 million people were enrolled in the high deductible health insurance plans that qualify them to start a health savings account, a number that is rising. (Zeller, 3/20)

More From KHN on HSAs:

Just shy of Medicare eligibility, [Erika] Snyder is part of the age 50 to 64 demographic that would face much higher insurance costs under the GOP plan, known as the American Health Care Act. The law would eliminate Obamacare subsidies that 3 million Americans in that age bracket currently rely on to purchase insurance. It would also allow insurers to charge older people up to 5 times as much as younger Americans for individual policies, while providing an age-based tax credit that experts say would fall far short of covering these聽additional costs. (Ross, 3/17)

The House Republican plan to overhaul the Affordable Care Act would delay, not repeal, the so-called "Cadillac tax" on the most expensive job-based health insurance plans. The news came as a disappointment to some聽in the Republican rank and file, as well as labor union members, who fought for years against the 40 percent excise tax, which is currently scheduled to begin in 2020 and would be pushed off until 2025 under the latest proposal. (Chakrabarti, 3/16)

Operators of tanning salons are hoping Republicans can lift some of the gloom that has hung over their sun beds for decades, a slump brought on by health concerns and accelerated by a tax imposed by the Obama health law. (Stech and Rubin, 3/16)

Obamacare required members of Congress to enroll in the law鈥檚 health insurance plans. But so far, Republicans aren鈥檛 planning to require lawmakers to participate in the new insurance market they鈥檙e proposing.In fact, no one really knows where lawmakers are going to have to get their health insurance under repeal. (Haberkorn, 3/16)

Older Floridians with health insurance through the Affordable Care Act will pay higher premiums under the Republican replacement proposal, called the American Health Care Act, than they do now under the current law also known as Obamacare, according to an analysis released Thursday by AARP. The AARP analysis found that an estimated 450,000 Floridians between 50 and 64 would face higher premiums under the AHCA 鈥 more than any other state. (Chang, 3/16)

Calling Florida 鈥済round zero鈥 for the impact of the GOP鈥檚 proposed health care plan, the AARP warned Thursday that more than 450,000 of the state鈥檚 residents age 50 to 64 would pay hundreds or even thousands of dollars more each year for coverage. The nonpartisan advocacy organization also said Florida would be the nation鈥檚 hardest hit by the plan鈥檚 so-called 鈥渁ge tax鈥 鈥 which allows insurance companies to charge older policyholders up to five times as much as younger ones. (Santich, 3/16)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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