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Alabama Blue Cross Shares Obamacare Tax Woes With Customers

Insurance companies aren’t crazy about their share of the health law’s taxes, but mostly they’ve complained to politicians and regulators.

At least one health plan wants to bring consumers into the loop.

“Affordable Care Act Fees and Taxes” is a separate line item on bills is sending to individual customers.

The tax amount is $23.14 a month, or $277.68 annually, on a statement one subscriber shared with Kaiser Health News. 聽That’s added to the “Current Amount Due for Benefits” of $322.26, for a total monthly premium of $345.40 for one person.

Taxes have been part of health plan costs for decades. 聽business taxes聽are often borne by consumers in the form of higher prices.

But insurers haven’t typically published taxes on their invoices, says .

“One thing that bothers me is attributing any amount specifically to the ‘Affordable Care Act,'” he said via email. “There are also state premium taxes, and normal corporate and sales taxes, none of which are itemized the same way.”

He also questioned whether Alabama Blue Cross would have been able to calculate the amount so precisely.

Obamacare backers say the taxes are critical to the health law, which stands to bring insurers billions in new premium revenue. They point out that federal subsidies will help many consumers pay not just the taxes but big portions of the premiums.

Alabama Blue Cross accounted for these ACA taxes in the amounts shown on individual subscriber bills, said spokeswoman Koko Mackin:

  • A fee for the . Next year it’s 聽for the year. PCORI works to control health costs through research that attempts to distinguish wasteful spending from cost-effective procedures.
  • A premium tax 聽about 2 percent to consumer costs. This is the one insurers聽 and have been trying to delay or get rid of.
  • A to sell through the online marketplace that the federal government operates for Alabama and 35 other states.
  • Reinsurance and risk-adjustment fees to create as they are required to accept people with pre-existing illness under new price regulations.

Alabama Blue Cross could end up losing some of that backstop money permanently if its medical claims turn out to be lower than expected. But it might also get some back 聽if costs rise past projections, Hall said.

The ACA’s risk-adjustment fee 聽is a “zero-sum program” spread across the industry, he said. “The government doesn’t keep the fee. It’s just a pass-through, from some insurers to other insurers.” It’s unlikely Alabama Blue Cross knows yet what its risk-adjustment costs will be in the end, he said.

Another backstop fee, a temporary, $63 per head annual reinsurance fee, is projected to lower average premiums for individual subscribers by as much as 5 percent or 10 percent, Hall said. That’s because all insurance plans pay the fee while the $10 billion it generates next year will be used to subsidize only the smaller individual insurance market.