Why ‘Repeal and Delay’ of Obamacare Could Send Premiums Soaring Next Year

Why ‘Repeal and Delay’ of Obamacare Could Send Premiums Soaring Next Year · The Fiscal Times

Major insurers say they could adjust to a major upheaval in the health care markets if Republicans make good on their pledge to simultaneously repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act with a plausible new plan.

But if Republicans fail to develop a replacement plan in timely fashion – which increasingly appears to be the case – then insurers will either bail out of the individual health insurance market in 2018 or jack up premiums by as much as 15 percent to 20 percent.

Related: Repeal and Replace Obamacare in 200 Days? Good Luck With That

These are some of the findings of a new survey of 13 health insurance companies in 28 states conducted by Georgetown University’s Center on Health Insurance reforms and funded by the Urban Institute and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

The insurance companies generally agreed that a repeal and delay strategy – in which Congress votes to dismantle key portions of Obamacare effective at a future date without a concurrent replacement -- would destabilize the individual insurance market.

Insurers told researchers that without a replacement plan, premium increases next year could range as high as 20 percent – similar to the average premium increases for 2017 that were widely mocked by Republican critics and cited as a reason for dismantling Obamacare.

In particular, the individual market would likely be destabilized if Congress eliminates Obamacare premium subsidies for lower income Americans, the individual mandate targeted at forcing younger people to sign up for insurance, and federal cost-sharing to protect insurance companies from significant financial losses.

Related: GOP Sets the Clock for Obamacare Repeal as Health Care Groups Hit the Panic Button

“With 13.8 million people projected to enroll in marketplace plans in 2017, the uncertain future of the ACA is of concern to the insurance industry,” Sabrina Corlette, a research professor at Georgetown University who took part in the study, said in a statement Friday. “While insurers are confident they can adjust to new regulations given enough transition time between the ACA and its replacement, a lack of clarity from policymakers could mean that consumers will lose coverage or face dramatically higher premiums.”

While a substantial transition or buffer period to adjust to new GOP regulations would be helpful, the insurers said, there was no consensus on how long such a period should be.

The study comes as congressional Republicans wound up a three-day policy retreat in Philadelphia in which party leaders mapped out timelines for action this year for replacing a four-year old program that insures more than 20 million Americans, but without providing clarity on how they would do that.