Health care costs are likely to put more stress on the family budget during the next decade.
The amount of money Americans spend on health care is likely to rise by about 5.5% per year for the next several years, according to new government projections on health spending through 2026. Spending on health will most likely rise by considerably more than inflation or GDP growth, which means it will increasingly strain both the federal budget and the personal finances of millions of Americans.
Health spending actually moderated for several years following the 2007 – 2009 recession, averaging an increase of 3.8% per year from 2008 to 2013. In the private insurance market, spending per person rose just 1.7% in 2012 and 2.1% in 2013. Those were among the lowest increases in health spending on record. The recession explains most of that, since people spend less on health care when money is tight, especially if they lose their job and the insurance that goes with it.
That respite appears to be over. The latest numbers, published by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, show that spending rose by 5% per year from 2014 through 2016, the last year for which data is available. Health spending should rise by 5.3% in 2018, with average increases of 5.7% per year from 2021 through 2026, according to the forecast.
Several factors account for the disproportionate rise in health spending. The U.S. population is aging, and older people require more care. The population is also growing, another factor leading to more use of health care overall. And health care inflation is typically higher than overall inflation, which pushes costs up.
The Affordable Care Act, which went into effect in 2014, has been intensely controversial — but it hasn’t had as much effect on health care costs as its strongest supporters and detractors tend to think. It did push overall spending up, simply because more people were able to get health insurance, and access to care. It may have lowered costs in one part of Medicare, because of required changes there. On the whole, other forces seem to have more of an impact on spending.
The biggest effect of the ACA, in terms of cost, has probably been on people who buy insurance themselves, because they’re not covered by an employer, and earn too much to qualify for subsidies under the ACA. Insurers face limits on raising premiums and out-of-pocket expenses in most parts of the market, but have more freedom to raise prices on people buying individual policies, as Yahoo Finance and other news organizations have documented.