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Obamacare is hurting these people—and Congress is doing nothing about it

Joe Gibialante’s health insurance premiums are so high that people think he must be fibbing about them.

Before the Affordable Care Act went into effect in 2014, Gibialante, 53, an estate manager who lives in Bethesda, Maryland, paid about $2,300 per year for insurance that covered him and his wife, with a $1,000 deductible for each. Premiums have soared since then, and he now pays $13,000 per year for a plan with a $6,550 deductible per person. “I’m driving an older car than I’d like, we’ve trimmed back on holidays and we’ve cut all charitable giving,” Gibialante tells Yahoo Finance. “What really frustrates me is whenever I get in a conversation about this, I get told, ‘you’re lying. No way.’ People just don’t believe this is the case.”

The Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare, has helped about 20 million Americans gain health insurance coverage, and lowered costs for others. But the law came with glitches that have caused huge cost increases for a subset of the insured public that numbers perhaps 1 million Americans. Congress could tweak the law to help those being pinched by it. But that’s not on the agenda in the Republican-controlled Congress or President Trump’s White House, where the only options seem to be an outright repeal of the law or a major rollback. If the GOP repeal bills fail, which seems likely, Trump has said bluntly, “we’ll let Obamacare fail.”

The ACA benefits lower-income Americans the most, since they qualify for the most generous subsidies that help cover the cost of insurance. Subsidies decline as income goes up, and disappear completely for people who earn more than 400% of the poverty level, which this year is $48,240 for an individual and $98,400 for a family of 4. There’s another catch above those income levels. Up to 400% of the poverty line, federal subsidies are supposed to cover the incremental cost of a benchmark plan once it exceeds 9.69% of income. Above that level of income, however, there’s no limit on the cost of insurance, even if it were to eat half of your paycheck. This “middle-class cliff” is one reason the ACA began as an unpopular law and still enjoys only tepid public support.

Joe Gibialante of Bethesda, Md.: “People just don’t believe this is the case.”
Joe Gibialante of Bethesda, Md.: “People just don’t believe this is the case.”

About 28 million Americans buy coverage on their own, without the benefit of an employer plan. Roughly 9 million of those folks qualify for Obamacare subsidies. Of the rest, it’s hard to know how many are grappling with sharply higher health-insurance costs, but health care analysts estimate that it’s 1 million or more. They tend to be middle-class professionals between 50 and 64 who work as independent contractors, small-business owners, or employees of a small business that doesn’t offer coverage. “This is really hitting people between 400% and 500% of the poverty line,” says John Holahan of the Urban Institute. “It’s a real cliff, and if you’re on the wrong side of that cliff, you’re getting hammered.”