Study: Premium Increases To Be Offset By Subsidies, Better Coverage
How the federal health law will affect premiums is among the most asked 鈥 and most controversial 鈥 questions in the final months before new rules kick in requiring most Americans to carry coverage.

A considers how the law will affect premiums for people who buy their own coverage because they don鈥檛 get it through their jobs. The answer? 聽It all depends, said the analysts at the Kaiser Family Foundation. (KHN is an editorially independent program of the foundation.)
The paper says the law鈥檚 provision that limits premiums for older consumers to no more than聽three times what younger people pay will mean those younger beneficiaries, particularly men, will pay more than they do now.聽 Older people and many women will see lower rates, the paper says.
At the same time, broader benefit packages than are often purchased聽by individuals today, limits on deductibles and other costs and rules that bar insurers from rejecting people with pre-existing medical conditions will also cause premiums to rise compared with what they would have done without the law.
Starting in 2014, for example, policies must include coverage for maternity care, prescription drugs and mental health treatment, benefits that聽often are not included in policies purchased by individuals today .
鈥淭he more complete benefits will increase premiums when compared to current nongroup policies because there is more coverage,鈥 the paper says.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not that we should not be concerned about how much some people will have to pay for insurance under reform, but concerns about sweeping rate shock are exaggerated,鈥 said Larry Levitt, a senior vice president at the foundation and one of the co-authors of the report. 鈥淪ubsidies are by far the biggest factor that cushions the impact of any increases in premiums people might see.鈥
The paper does not estimate how much premiums will increase.聽 , however, projected that premiums for individuals who buy their own coverage could go up 10 to 30 percent because of the law鈥檚 rules. More recent surveys by consultants and insurers have speculated that premiums could rise far higher than that, depending on a person鈥檚 age and health. A 27-year-old, for example, could see an average increase of 169 percent in five markets
Still, Kaiser Family Foundation researchers and others have said that federal subsidies available to low- and moderate-income Americans are likely to offset the increases for many consumers.聽 The rules on how much premiums can vary among younger and older consumers, for example, are likely to be offset by subsidies for about 80 percent of those currently in the individual market, according to the paper.
鈥淲hile many younger enrollees would see higher premiums under the聽three-to-one age limit, they would not pay more because they would receive a tax credit that caps their premium obligation as a percentage of their income,鈥 the paper says.
But that solution raises other concerns, said consultant Robert Laszewski, a former insurance industry executive.
鈥淎 lot is made of the fact that federal subsidies will offset (the increases), but there is no Santa Claus,鈥 he said. 鈥淐onsumers will have much of these increases mitigated and taxpayers will pay for them.鈥
Insurers, along with some lawmakers and advocacy groups for young people, are urging that the ratio rule be phased in slowly. Most states allow wider variations now 鈥 or set no limits at all.
A Wednesday by Rep. Phil Gingrey, R-Ga., would allow states to set their own ratio.聽聽It has already drawn opposition from AARP, which represents older Americans and which argues it would 鈥渂e a huge step backward鈥 to allows insurers to continue 鈥渢he discriminatory practice of charging exorbitant premiums to older Americans.鈥
The federal health law does allow insurers to sell special policies to Americans under 30 that would provide limited catastrophic聽coverage in exchange for what聽are expected to be lower premiums than other types of policies. People buying those policies, however, would pay higher deductibles and are not eligible for federal subsidies.